Sword's claim was about something from nothing. Complexity arises from simpler origins.
For me, there is a difference between something becoming more complex and something
gaining something. The gain is the
something from nothing problem.
Example: You give me a black and white photo. I do something to the photo and give it back to you. You notice that it is now a colour photo, with all the right colours in the right places. That photo has gained something that couldn't come from what was there.
If you start from a single common ancestor and jump to human beings, what gains do you have?
- The senses
- brain, eyes, nose, ears, heart, lungs, kidneys, ...
- the ability to make moral choices
- intelligence
- male and female
- sexual reproduction
Now: If the ability for all this to evolve was present in the single common ancestor, where did it come from? You are in exactly the same position as you claim I am in, by saying that the question of
where did the creator come from? is a problem. If the ability for all this was not present in the single common ancestor, then you are saying that it came from nothing! That's your problem, and that is the problem with the
bottom-up approach.