Man, this sort of discussion raises so many questions I've had in my mind for decades, that it's hard to even grasp a beginning point to start talking about it.
My first exposure to organized religion was when my mother dropped myself and my next youngest brother off for our first Sunday School session. I think I was 5 or 6 years old. I listened intently, and asked questions. Nearly every answer was the equivalent of "you must have faith." Ronnie, my younger brother, sort of collapsed into a ball and just cried most of the time. I guess he wasn't ready for separation from home and mom. When mom picked us up and asked what we thought about Sunday School, I just said it all didn't make sense to me. These were people trying to teach me something that they knew nothing at all about. So I wasn't interested in going back. My mom just said that she only wanted to expose us to it, and that was that.
Nothing has changed, as far as I know. Of course, "religion" is about the epitome of a class of social interaction that has no grounding whatsoever in reality. The fact that some religions will violently oppose others, where neither KNOWS any more about the subject matter they are fighting over than the other, tells more about humanity than it does about whatever entity they are claiming to BELIEVE in. Would any bonafide God demand that the creatures under it's benevolent (or in some reasons not quite so much) care actually and literally worship it? But if man was made in God's image, well, I guess that does sorta make sense.
So what exactly makes a "God"? Is that something anyone can BECOME if they could attain the powers attributed to God?
Just out of curiosity, has anyone been able to create organic life in the lab from inorganic materials? Heck, for that matter, what is the actual definition of "life"?
It appears that mankind is on the precipice of creating inorganic "life", of sorts, with artificial intelligence. Would that programmed self awareness in AI be the equivalence of digital life? Would that AI be granted the powers of self preservation and self replication, along with the self awareness, or what the programmers specifically put in limitations via hardwired programming? In short, if WE would do that with AI, why would not a God who had created us (if in fact that did happen), not do the same to us?
Anyway, before creationism can be validated, doesn't the actual proof of a "creating" deity need to be proven first? Otherwise, how can there even be such a discussion of "either/or" if there is no proof that the "or" even exists?
Perhaps the error is in believing that we could prove God by understanding what God is. Perhaps that is as improbable to do as it would be for ants to understand the mind of the contractor directing the bulldozers able to alter their universe.
As for evolution, heck, just the definition of what makes a species is problematic. Seems kind of silly to me that you have an entity (human beings) that on one hand will spend lifetimes trying to differentiate something like milksnakes into various species and subspecies based on such arcane things as scale counts, minor skeletal structures, and hemipenes shape, and then on the other hand have a kazillion different types of dogs all over the earth and claim they are all the same species.
Maybe the problem is just that all of our definitions of important terms is just really screwed up.
