Calling "poor design" assumes you know what the process is. Go ahead, I'm sure we all want to hear that.
No, you don't need that. You can look at the manifest flaws of the end product, the limitations it imposes that don't need to be imposed, and identify poor design.
And that is aside from us not actually knowing the limits to alien life.
Other potentially 'better designed' life doesn't undermine the case of the 'chosen' species of God, and its immediate surroundings, being poorly designed.
Whatever the purpose of the universe, God doesn't actually need it.
We do, though, and it's overwhelmingly hostile to us, who are supposed to be the point of it.
Rather than looking at the universe as a mechanistic industrial process I think we are better off thinking of it more in terms of a piece of art where the art gets to produce itself.
The message it conveys, as a piece of performance art, is poor design.
I think Christianity has concentrated more on what mankinds purpose is rather than the purpose of the universe and this is summed up in the Westminster confession "man's chief end is to know God and enjoy him forever"
Because when they suggested that the universe was there for the purpose of man it quickly became obvious that was nonsense. Before Christianity can focus on what the purpose is of mankind it needs to establish a rationale for presuming there is a purpose, otherwise we're just back to theology being the Emperor's New Clothes of philosophy.
O.