Because any belief not derived from evidence is fantasy, by definition. If there were any evidence for a god, then 'goddidit' would be a leading theory in cosmology. As it is, there is no such evidence, so goddidit is not even a theory, never mind a leading one. Goddidit, is therefore, is an indulgence, a fantasy indulged for psychological reasons, but not a rational explanation based on evidence.
I believe you are fooling yourself. God has never been out of the running regarding the creation and existence of the world and mankind.
You denying the truth that God platys an integral part of mans life and belief is really the illusion you create.
The evidence is that those who believe have prayers answered and miracles happen.
Prayer and miracles don't really meet the standard of evidence you would expect in a scientific context.
There is a scientific context for proving or disproving God, is there. Didn't think so, so why make such a statement about a scientific standard of evidence it doesn't meet? Surely the truth is that science doesn't have anything to explain prayers being answered and miracles. Do no standard to meet.
It's patchy, not consistent, and probably these phenomena find a truer explanation through psychology and the placebo effect.
Placebo affect would not explain a miracle or answer to prayer.
I am surprised at you Torridon...you have no arguments..
For instance if you go to Lourdes you might see crutches left behind by people who believe they were miraculously cured, but in reality might have just found there the necessary self-belief to cast aside their walking aid.
Are you really having a laugh... You might dip a wheelchair in the water and it will come out with two new tyres... Sounds silly now doesn't it.. Do you actually have any arguments at all to explain why people are really cured?
We don't get amputees coming home from Lourdes with suddenly regrown limbs.
I don't know but isn't withered limbs renewed just as good a miracle? Seems that amputees have had limbs grown back in the past. Could be a matter of belief.
This suggests the healing power of prayer is a natural power already resident within the minds of all humans.
Doesn't suggest any such thing... How do people severed spinal cord get up and walk?
Also this phenomenon is culturally widespread, it is not confined to Abrahamic faiths, probably most alleged miracles take place in other faith contexts, particularly in Hinduism and Sikhism. So I grant you, belief in God can be a beneficial thing but that doesn't make god actually exist in any normal sense of the word.
You do not have a scientific argument at all...