No, it doesn't exist. It was a bad experiment, and should be completely discounted.
When I read this reply, I suspected you weren't really reading or at least understanding my posts, after reading the entire reply, I am sure of it. The evidence exists, the quality, premis, conclusion, etc. is what you are questioning. That is a different discussion all together, the question I am dealing with at the moment is what evidence exists, we can discuss the sugnificance of the evidence at length after we determine what evidence exists.
So, just because we don't yet have the experimental data to infer every little detail of our world, we must insert God? I'm sorry, but no, that makes no sense whatsoever. I, for one, will not make the leap to saying that God gives particles their mass just because we haven't yet created the Higgs boson in the laboratory.
I am not suggesting that at all, what I am suggesting is that we cannot remove the possibility of God simply because we have no more evidence for His existance than we have for his lack of existance. In short, it's an "even handed" approach to our understanding of the spiritual part of our world. Which in turn can help us in our understanding of the empirical world.
My view of origins, comes from an even handed approach to all subjects, as much as possible, I appraoch all topics with a premis of we don't know, I might be right or wrong in what I have been taught and believe. From there, I look at the evidence presented and evaluate it as emotion free and even handed as is possible, over the years I have become pretty good at it, though it is humanly impossible to totally acheive such. The end result is that I can look at the evidence and say, what if... what if God does exist, what if God doesn't exist..... what if.....what if evolution is truth, what if creation is truth....what if....... Point being I said to you
what if but you refuse to accept any possible but what you believe. I am not talking here about what I believe, personally, that is a different matter, and why I believe what I do is still yet a different matter. What we are talking about is the
what if's You have turned it into a debate about whether or not God does exist when the issue raised was
what if God does, how would that affect our understanding. (The reverse was also put forth and ignored by and large)I honestly don't believe that in the confinds of forum, discussion, science, spirit, etc. we can know God, He is too big to be confined (that is a personal belief based on many evidences), so such a discussion is frankly worthless. To try and confine God is a stupid thing to even try so far as I can tell, but to discuss the
what if's as it applies to science is worth while, because it opens more ideas, more possibles, more avenues for understanding and truth. You don't have to believe the
what if's for them to open new worlds, you just have to be willing to accept that we may not know and we may not ever know, in this case, from a scientific standpoint. And from science, we simply don't know if God exists or not, even handed discussion, even handed debate, even handed idea, remove the bias and see what is possible, then decide what you will believe.