Again??!!??
Indeed. See post 20. I was quite willing to give you the benfit of the doubt, but as you repeated the same distortion in post 21, you are either persisting in twisting my words or you don't understand what you are writing.
OK let me get this straight, You believe there could be reasons out there but they haven't been presented to you?
No need. The need for comfort, ameliorating the fear of death, cultural norms, emotional security are all reasons why a person might believe in God.
Ah well here I think you are confusing reason with empirical evidence. In other words many scientific theories of the past were wrong but they were not unreasonable
Quite correct, but I am not talking about scientific theories, I am talking about the lack of any sort of objective evidence, nothing more and nothing less. Hence, on the basis of this, I would suggest that it is entirely rational for me to have no belief in God.
Not sure why the inverted commas are there
I simply quoted the word you used
Yes, I used to think that adequately explained things but there are a couple of aspects to them 1) How do they arise ? 2) What about the explanatory gaps.
Same problems with God. How did he arise? What about the problems attached to a God of the omnis?
In other words how do we get from say intelligence to consciousness. The answer was by leaps of faith,
That assumes that they are necessarily related. I don't know of any 'leap of faith' which explains either or illustrates the development from one to the other.
I believed as you do that science would have the answer, and that is inescapably a belief, that science has the answer
I am open to any form of objective evidence. It doesn't have to be science, although, practically, at the moment, that looks like our best bet.
No I have given the argument from contingency and have pointed out that beliefs such as empiricism, scientism(faith in science)and naturalism are themselves unevidenced beliefs although they work as tools in certain contexts and your confusion of reason and empirical evidence
No confusion at all. As I suggest above, it is entirely rational for me not to have a belief in God when I have no reason to suppose it exists.
The argument from contingency can be refuted of course, and, even if accepted, there is no reason to assume that the necessary entity is translatable as a conscious entity.
So, I leave you with the same question as before. What method(s) of investigation as to whether God exists or not have less limitations than natural investigation?