Infinite regression refutes itself.
In what way?
The fact you take an infinite regression lends problems to the rest of your understanding.
OK, if we assume that infinite regression is impossible (which I'll be quite interested to see the evidence for), how do you know the first cause was God?
Yet we still know it exists.
What? Time? We know that time exists. We also know that it is not infinite.
No its a standard with objective merit. Otherwise its unstateable. Its just not something that nonreligious people like to take into consideration.
Is 'tasty' an objective standard? What about 'pretty'? If you asked a group of people on the street what their perfect holiday destination would be, you'd get many different answers, because 'perfect' is a subjective idea. Subjective ideas are perfectly stateable; I can state that a particular painting is the prettiest painting I've seen, but it won't be an objective statement, just a statement of my personal viewpoint.
Unless, of course, you can show that perfection is an objective standard.
Chance is impossible which has been refuted via mathematical calculations.
What calculations?
This is a strawman. The argument is not made that the watch is a part of teh watchmaker. Just that the watch was created by the watchmaker.
Good point, I must have misread that. What about my issue with question 3? You cannot base a logical argument on a supposition and then expect people to take it as fact. The entire argument becomes hypothetical, and cannot be used to say anything about reality.
It is if you are going to claim that there are 20 arguments, when in fact the number is much less.
Thats fine. Its only meant to prove Theism.
OK then.
Because of the Final Anthropic Principle.
The Final Anthropic Principle is concerned with intelligent information processing
within the universe, not outside of it. So unless God came after the Big Bang, the Principle does not apply.
Thats very similar to the circular reasoning of David Hume.
Well the claim that miracles exist is circular, so it would stand to reason that any refutation would also have to take that into account.
Also, you missed this. You posted it, but didn't quote it:
"Demonstrate that point #2 and #3 are true, and then you might have an argument. This argument has the same problem as argument #5."
Can you demonstrate that point #2 and #3 are true?
They dont' need to physically exist. There is more to the world than the external world of affairs.
I agree. However, that argument relies upon the claim that a truth must physically exist in a mind somewhere, which is nonsense. Reality is reality regardless of whether anyone actually knows about it or not.
No, its an objective standard. We have also pointed out with some of your understanding that you are applying objective standards to subjective terms...thus you have things backwards on many levels.
Again, I ask you to demonstrate that 'greater' is objective. I believe you are the one applying objectivity to subjective ideas like 'perfection' or 'greater'.
This proves that the killer is not the highest thought able to be conceived. Secondly, a killer is not conceptual, and need not apply here. It exists in the physical world.
God is not conceptual either, if you're attempting to prove he is real.
Everything seems to be subjective to your understanding.
Not everything. I've pointed this out to you several times, but you fail to pay attention every time. Some things are subjective, some are not. Conceptual ideas such as 'better' or 'greater' are subjective, because they rely upon a hierarchy that is entirely within each individual's mind. Facts, such as the distance from the Earth to the Sun, are objective. Things that exist physically are objective, while things that are entirely conceptual are subjective.
You have no standard to judge that by off of your presupps.
Here we go. This is the point where you start arguing against a strawman, claiming that I think everything is subjective and therefore that I can't make any claims, which is not only nonsensical (I can say things are 'tasty'), but also untrue. You're making a nice strawman here. Not only that, but it doesn't apply to my argument at all.
Morality is a personal thing, there is no evidence of a greater moral obligator. That's why some people support abortion, and some do not - if morality was objective, we would all agree. The
fact(this is an objective thing) that we do not demonstrates that people have different morals, which shows that either:
1) There is no external source for morality.
2) There
is an external source for morality, but it only gives morals to a select number of people.
Either way, the argument does not work because morals are demonstrably subjective.
And evolution is the product of what?
Mutation and Natural Selection.
The argument isn't being stated this way, and its not trying to prove what you think it is likely.
In a logical argument, all premises must be supported in order for the conclusion to have any chance of being accepted as true. The argument, to my understanding, is saying that we have desires that we cannot achieve, so therefore there must be something that can satisfy them. That does not logically follow. Not all desires require a way of achieving them.
This fails to make a necessary dichotomy between information.
I know. So did the argument in the OP.
Different circumstances, and for political reasons, not thought based.
What political reasons? This sounds suspiciously like an attempt to brush away an argument that you cannot address.
Divine could be thought of as God, but again this is more existential in quality.
The operative word there being
'could'. Until you can demonstrate that divine = God, the argument does not argue for the existence of God.
I'll look at this, but these arguments against Pascal's Wager seem to be redundant after a while. Pascal's WAger does not prove, or attempt to prove God, just that its more beneficial to believe in infinite than not.
Yes, and the video demonstrates that this fails as an argument, because you have to pick
which God to follow (remember that many Gods will not give you paradise/heaven if you do not follow them and only them), and in the end you are making one choice out of an infinite number of possibilities. In other words, believing in a God doesn't actually improve your chances.