Vlad,
No, No, No all I do is to draw your attention to the leap of faith required to declare the universe probably God free. Yes folks naturalism requires a step of faith.
Oh dear. Look, it's simple enough: for epistemological purposes either you treat
all un-defined, un-argued, un-evidenced conjectures the same way or you collapse into special pleading for the one you happen to prefer over the rest. And if you
do treat them the same way, then the universe probably is god-free for just the same reason that it's probably pixie-free, or probably tap-dancing unicorns on Alpha Centauri-free, or... etc.
You can't have it both ways - either you think that all of them are more probably true than not, or that none of them are.
Mind you if you also think a probably God free universe is more logical.....i'd like to see that demonstrated.
You just did.
What is the probability of a God free universe Blue. Show your working out.
It's logic, not a mathematical equation. There's enough intersubjective experience of, say, gravity for it to be "true (enough)"; there's not enough intersubjective experience of "God" (or of pixies, or of unicorns) for it to be "true (enough)", so it's "not true (enough)".
That the arguments theists attempt to demonstrate "God" are logically hopeless doesn't help them much either by the way, though that of itself is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for the "probably god-free" position.
Oh, and none of this by the way has anything to do with why you crashed and burned so badly re the Stephen Law argument - i.e., the topic of this thread you started - and your attempts at the going nuclear argument.