But did I say there is nothing wrong with them? I first would have to know what they are.
I have already stated the basic presuppositions.
1. The world is real. i.e. it is not, as claimed in Hindu theology, a grand illusion-- a Matrix-style hologram. We are not brains in a vat collectively (or solipsistically) conjuring up the cosmos from our brainwaves. It is really out there.
(For a Christian, this follows from the doctrine of Creation. God made a real world.)
2. The world is orderly. It operates in a pattern of cause and effect that once deciphered makes it possible to predict the future recurrence of that pattern e.g. to predict eclipses in the future from the known pattern of planetary movement. This also makes it possible to retrodict past eclipses which were not observed or recorded.
(For a Christian, this follows from the conviction that God is a God of order, not confusion, and from the promises given in scripture that the ordinary processes of nature designed to sustain life will not be disrupted.)
3. The order of the world is intelligible. We can discover it and understand it by the use of our senses and the application of our reason to our observations.
(For a Christian this follows from the conviction that God made humanity in God's image, capable, to a limited extent*, of following God's thoughts and entering into comprehensible communication with God.
*Obviously, there are also mysteries in God well beyond all human or even angelic comprehension.)
To the extent that science discovers the order (also called "laws") of the ceated nature, I feel confident that they will discover that there must somehow be a "law giver". In other words if science remains conscient of the transcendent origin of origins, one can remain hopeful. It might even make it easier..... to believe in creation.
Not really. The presuppositions are presuppositions and in themselves cannot be proven but must be assumed. So they cannot lead to discovering a deity. And if the first presupposition (the world is real) is incorrect, the discovery of particular patterns or regularities in nature ("laws of nature") are just patterns in our imagination, like the world itself.
That there is a reality which transcends the physical reality revealed through sense, reason and science must always remain a matter of faith. It is not discoverable by scientific means.
I can never figure out why some Christians have a problem with that. Isn't the point to be people of faith?
Most of the scientists in this forum, as well as lay defenders of science like myself, already believe in creation. Why do you think people need more than faith to believe?
Do you remember Jesus' parable of the rich man and Lazarus? I think it a good caution. When the man pleads with Abraham to send Lazarus to his brothers, Abraham replies, "If they do not believe Moses, they will not believe even if one should rise from the dead." If people do not believe in God with the evidence we already have, what good will more evidence do?
Note the first line in my signature.