Probably well ninjaed, but my take on this...
Laws have to be made in the universe with OUT any reason for them being made, why was gravty made long before planets?
Simple to answer, this one. Planets (as we know them, and on the premise of no divine hand involved) could not be
made without gravity. As such we are 'privileged' to be in a universe where "gravity was made, then planets".
[...]why dose it look logical? (with out laws the universe would not be here) thats just the start
It's an interesting start, especially asking "why things are like they are". Usually leading to one or other of the Anthropic Principles, some of which are akin to ID. But at the other end of the scale "if it didn't work, it wouldn't be here". Or "if it worked
differently then it would be different", and then either
we wouldn't be here (because we couldn't exist under a system that works differently) or 'we' would be different and wondering why the (different) system was so well attuned to create our (different) selves...
You claim it is, I disagree, I believe in god for the same reason except that IMO God is a lot less complex then evrey sing TRILLION Pound TRILLION of things harping on their own
Either way, I say there's a single cause. I'd personally go for that single cause cascading the whole set of 'laws' (our interpretations of how the universe ticks, which are doubtless approximations, just like Newton is good enough until you need to take Einstein into account, etc). Whether
we can derive the
TOE/
GUT that is
the core of the universe is... not something I'm confident about. But we can refine what we know about gravity and relativity and quantum mechanics and the like to get an "ahh...
that's why there's a Speed Of Light/Higgs Boson/good chance that toast will fall butter-side-down/etc, etc, etc".
God's complexity (IMO) comes from the fact that now we have to apply
intention to the mix. It's not "particles were created with a mutually attractive force between them, which leads to them clumping, leading to [everything else, as a series of dependant events]", but "
why does God think that it would be a good idea to have stars and planets and moons, instead of just one large flat sheet for everything?" Indeed, God could intend that
tomorrow (it's too late to end the world and renew it today, methinks[1]) we're suddenly living on the infinite flat world, under the 'new rules'. Which we may wish to try to derive if we're not simultaneously 'converted' to imagine that things are exactly the same and things have
always been like that.
But then there's no stable foundation for
anything. Where do you go with that? I mean, one day it might be inexcusable to wear mixed fabrics and the next it wouldn't be?
Simpler to at least
imagine that (until and unless we're provoked to think otherwise) there are hard and fast
impersonal rules to the universe, which might need investigating and interpreting, but otherwise aren't at the whim of something/someone
outside those rules. Theosophy, OTOH, really only allows the interpretation (to as much or as little ultimate success as the mundane counterpart). I don't believe there's much in the way of Practical Theosophising able to be done. (Outside of Discworld, natch.)
Wrong, faith is belving with out seeing, or really knowing, you, by definition are saying
"if I cant prove it, it don't exist"
thats faith that if its not there where you can see it, then it don't exist
you put your faith in evince and that if we cant find God right now, it means he cant exist, ecen when history shows there are plenty of things we could not proved existed in till recently
As far as
I am concerned I'm not saying "It [i.e. God] doesn't exist", but I'm certainly not assuming He does. I'm more in a "If I can't prove it then I can't do anything useful with the given hypothesis" camp. I think a hard-line no-God position
is a... stance... that I see flaws in. But I don't believe I've seen too many people with that stance in this thread.
[1] Maliciously ignoring temporal omnipotetencies there.