You explain a thing with something that makes most sense to you. Science objectively explains the beginning of the universe, so ok, I buy that.
No, no it doesn't. We have deduced, using technology and applying the Scientific Method, one
possible beginning. It appears to have a bit of evidence floating around and no major holes in the theory, so in absense of a better idea most people run with it. The beginning of the universe is most definitely
not explained however.
And crying "But it's just what i believe!" doesn't change anything. Irrational beliefs remain irrational, and potentially dangerous when people act on them.
Not human mind. But wouldn't, by definition, mind be something that observes? Thus mind is required for observation of the universe(not existence of it).
In a word; No.
In more words; You clearly don't understand what you're talking about. If you want to discuss Quantum Mechanics i highly reccomend actually researching it, because it's a ludicrously complicated subject with vast misconceptions in the general populace, you cannot just 'pick it up' without dedicating time and effort to the subject.
That's what I said. And as far as I know, universe didn't start with elements, it started with matter. Electrons and Protons made Hydrogen, which fuses into Helium, which again fuses into heavier nuclei. That is, assuming we have strong interaction, which is required for nuclei to build up.
Under our current physical laws, sure. But our current physical laws are based around the basic phsyical forces. If you have different physical forces, you have different physical laws, and everything acts differently.
Increase it by few percents and diprotons would be stable.
Oh, anyways, the point is, there is no logical imperative that states strong interaction even has to exist, and there is no way of answering why it just happens to exist, so... It's just how universe works. Why does universe work just like it does? It could just work the same, but there would be no gluons. Again, bad questions, assuming universe just is like it is...
We know the universe is just like it is. Why? Well we don't know that one yet, assuming the question even has a meaningful answer.
Aand yeah, we do know that Gluons keep nuclei together. Without them, nucleons wouldn't stick together. Which is kinda the definition of other-than-hydrogen elements, there is atleast 2 protons...
Of course they do, but that's only under our current physical laws. We objectively have absolutely no way to tell what would happen if you change the fundamental physical forces; any suggestions as to what would happen is nothing more than passing fancy and wild hypothesis.
Some rational world views, for example, those that do think multi-verse is unlikely, require creator(or consider it likely based on the views person has)
No creator is ever required or even likely. A creator raises far more questions than it answers.
Thus, it is rational to assign value for creator for the creator to likely exist.
It is not rational to assign a value for something to exist when no evidence exists to support it.
Stating your world view is only correct one is stupid, Epistemological nihilism is just as correct as your view of the world is.
No it is not; only one world view is the correct one. We just don't know which one it is.
Additionally i am not stating that my world view is correct, merely that the religious world view cannot be rationally held to be correct.
Science doesn't state truths, it states something happens as cause of something else, and creates theories based on this. Nihilist can deny this gives any knowledge, but to disprove what science states, he must disprove the causality between the two. As that is what science states, basically.
You... don't actually know what the scientific method is do you?
Allow Wikipedia to enlighten you and stop you sounding like an idiot. (I don't mean this as a personal attack, but that line just sounds idiotic to anyone who knows what the scientific methoid is in the same way that the statement 'i am riding a flying purple elephant' sounds idiotic to anyone with eyes; it is patently bullshit.)
You appear to be making the common mistake of most religious worldviews; that of assigning 'Science' as some sort of powerful god-force or united body, as if 'Science' does something. Which is not only silly, but also a strawman.
-ADDENDUM-
Umm... yes? There is no binding force if there is no strong interaction, thus there is no nuclei bound together = there isn't anything heavier than hydrogen and no nuclear reactions.
Again, physics as we know it says this, but if you're changing the fundamental physical forces there is no reason to assume that the rest of the physical laws will remain the same. In fact there is every reason to assume that they will not.
In terms of not-quantum mechanics, you need atleast one mind to observe that the universe exists and to question how likely it is that any observer exists. As in, "this universe creates this mind. A different universe might well create a different mind. ".
The universe requires no mind.
But the point im saying is, some universes create no minds if the laws are different, and if we assume there is just one universe, how likely it is that this universe actually created something that observes? Sorry, it was bad quote.
Alright, fine, big guns time.
What are the odds of the universe creating life? Absolutely certain.
'What?!' i hear you cry, 'But the chances are astronomically small!'
Sure. But logically there has to be an infinity out there somewhere, and once infinity gets involved all finite numbers become certain.
Allow me to elaborate.
Universe is infinite; life certain.
Universe is finite; what's outside the Universe? If that's finite, then what's outside that? So on, ad infinitum. Again, life certain.
Multiple infinite Universes, either finite or infinite; life certain.
See what i'm getting at here? The only way life can be unlikely is if you have a finite Universe and a finite number of Universes. But if you have a finite Universe then there must be something outside the Universe; if it has borders, what is beyond the borders? It could be an infinite number of finite Universes, it really doesn't matter. Somewhere, somehow, Infinity is going to get involved. At which point all your statistics poop themselves.