what i noticed about Comfort's debate:
does anyone notice how these debates always go in circles. the theist says "you see this (insert item name) here? there is no way this could have been created without a creator" and the atheist says "of course it can!" and then the theist says "no, nothing is random" and the atheist says "of course there is" and so on....and the argument sets off on the wrong foot because both are trying to impose their view of the universe onto the other because one believes in a kind of determinism and the other in randomness or a version of it.
which i find a little curious tbh. the determinist are keen to point out that there must be a "painter painting this painting". but when looking at it from the randomness prespective, the painter doing this extremely random act of painting to produce this painting is himself or herself a random part of this extremely random universe. one borne off an assymetric chaos perpetuates this randomness..in the same light as when determinist look at the world borne of a set of causes and effects, leading to more causes and effect.
in other words, even the examples they give are looked at differently.
i also think that Comfort's point of "creation" was pretty moot. "Creation" is a very "religious", deterministic term, a term that atheists and agnostics dont use as freely as theists do. to anyone believing in randomness, there's no way he or she will use the expression "creation" to refer to the unverise. he does the same thing when he talks about human beings being moral creatures and made in the image of god (quite a thing to say to atheists, lol). anyone looking at human history can point to the exact opposite: that we are NOT moral. we have laws, and i argue, that we have those laws because we are immoral and we need to be kept in check. and on the whole, he seemed to get lost in his own evangelist agendas with that example because he started talking about the commandments with little or nothing to do with the atheist/theist debate. its more like "hey, become a christian or you're damned" which isnt the point.
and lol, at this faith comment. you don't need faith to get things done. if that's the case then no atheist in the world would ever become anything. although i do agree somewhat on the remark that atheists put themselves on an intellectual pedestal. i've met lots of atheists who practically look down on theists as gullible and idiotic. not all, but some.
not to mention that anyone would be hardpressed to convince me that there is an all-powerful, all-knowing humanoid form sitting up seven heavens above and governs this universe's cause and effects. what i'm getting at is "what kind of god" is being advocated.
~Sado
P.S. "we have a little place called hell and its reserved for hitler" hysterical