No. Killing mice has occurred through several reasons. In SU and at least Deism there is only one proposal an intelligent creator separate and independent from the universe it has created. At least in deism this has been the definition of God and the existence of such a thing has been argued against or not believed in by atheists and naturalists.
Deism is an unsupported story about a supernatural god or "supreme being", whereas the SU conjecture is an
explicitly naturalistic conjecture about technological civilizations.
The Oxford history of Christianity states there are two key ways of viewing God in Christianity One way is as Saviour and the other is as creator.
I'm sure it does but I didn't ask about ways to view god, did I?
Does it say that being a creator is the
only criterion to regard something as the Christian God? No need to be a saviour, or almighty, or all knowing, or good, or just, or anything to do with the Jesus character in the bible?
Unless it explicitly does say that, you still need to cite that source.
That being an intelligent creator who is independent from it's creator is a bizarre notion of godhood goes against all the evidence.
Once again you are confusing
necessity and
sufficiency. To claim that "being an intelligent creator who is independent from it's creation" is
sufficient to be god, goes against all the evidence.
And
YET AGAIN, you've ignored this question:
I'll also ask you
again to define the limits of this bizarre notion of godhood that you are proposing as I note that you ignored it
yet again (
#173).
What sort of 'universe' does one need to create? If I create a
Game of Life, populate it with some initial state, and set it going, I have created a kind of (simple) universe - am I therefore, a god? What about a more complex universe for a computer game - are the coders gods? What about weather or climate simulations?
So an intelligent creator of the universe who is not dependent or part of that universe isn't a god in any normal usage then.
The word, in any normal usage, implies
much more than that. Specifically, it
does not, an any normal usage, apply to (for example) a technological collaboration between natural, mortal beings (or to spotty teenagers, for that matter).