Logical fallacies called out in
bold red.
The Creator does exist. Proof for that is the Universe you live in and you yourself. You can't have a design without a designer.
First sentence:
Proof by assertion; second sentence:
fallacy of the single cause, circular reasoning and regression fallacy; third sentence:
reification and false analogy.
There you go again... "Everything requires a creator! Except the creator, because that'd just be silly. He's just eternal." Come on... that argument was debunked at least as early as 1927 by Russell.
Some call him God, others Allah. Whatever. To me it is more important to comprehend that a Creator exists instead of getting caught up in religions or differences between them.
Well, if it's important to you, I'll try. But in order to comprehend that a Creator exists, I first need to comprehend why (a) a Creator is needed and (b) why this Creator doesn't, himself, need a Creator. On your mark... Ready... Set... Go!
I am unsure if the Creator is a "Personal Creator".
But you're sure there is one. Interesting. Tell us, what attributes are you sure of and
how did you come to be sure? How can we discover them for ourselves so that we can be sure too?
For life to exist in our Universe the fine tuning required to the four fundamental forces of our Universe is so very extreme that it could not have happened randomly. Scientists concede this.
First paragraph:
Fallacy of the single cause, gambler's fallacy, proof by assertion, begging the question, fallacy of insufficient sample and lucid fallacy; second sentence:
Fallacy of quoting out of context and appeal to authority and/or accomplishment.
Ah yes, the argument of the fine-tuned universe. It's all the rage these days... except, it's nonsense. Let's start with the simple and indisputable fact that the Universe doesn't seem to be at all tuned to support human life.
However this did not satisfy some scientists since that means they would have to admit a higher force / intelligence created the Universe.
Appeal to motive, false dilemma and bulverismIf they thought this, they committed a number of logical fallacies - starting with the either/or fallacy. I'm forced to conclude that the unnamed scientists whose motives and thought you're privy to probably weren't very good scientists. Are you sure you aren't just making this shit up and pretending that "some scientists" said it?
So they came up with the theory that you would need an infinite amount of universes. In this multiverse it would be possible that at least one of those Universes would have the correct values for life to develop as it has over billions of years.
Straw man fallacyThe same is possible without a multiverse, just not in parallel. Not that "in parallel" means much when applied outside the temporal causality framework of the Universe we exist in.
This is hilarious. I mean, the odds of this is even greater than the odds of a Creator existing.
Pooh-pooh fallacy, wishful thinking, kettle logic, argument from incredulity and Nirvana fallacy.
Well, since you see to have, precisely, quantified the odds, care to share them with us? I mean, it's not like I think you're bullshiting us... I just like to see the numbers.
And how did this multiverse come to be?
Onus probandi and moving the goalpostsI'll answer after you tell me how your Creator come to be.
Anybody with eyes wide open and a clear mind will realize there is a Creator.
Fallacy of esoteric knowledge, fallacy of magical thinking, proof by assertion and thought-terminating cliché