When you see a table of dominoes, everyone knows that someone set them up.
If you find a piece of paper or a golf ball or a tennis ball deep in the wilderness, then everyone knows that someone on the ground or in the sky was responsible for putting it there.
When the object becomes larger like a universe, the atheist suddenly concludes that no one put it there.
In my area of Ontario there are a lot of geologic features attributed to glacial activity. In fact just about every feature is related to the most recent ice age. I don't ask who put the kettle ponds, erratic boulders, till deposits, and so on where they are. They are obviously natural in origin. The fossils I find in my local creek don't cause me to wonder who made them. Man made objects like golf balls and broken glass bottles, on the other hand, are pretty obviously produced by us. They don't cause me to puzzle between natural formations and man made objects or rubbish. Natural formations on Earth are obviously natural and for that matter nothing I see beyond the Earth seems anything other than natural either.
Natural objects like planets and stars are fully accounted for by science. I don't see any evidence they were designed. What is the universe if it is not simply more planets, stars, gas clouds, comets, asteroids, etc.? They all are natural in their origin. Nl, you are in the unenviable philosophical position of claiming God made all these things (as we made bottles and buildings) without providing the evidence. You can't demonstrate the truth of your conviction. Everyone acknowledges that religious belief comes down to faith. Far from giving the appearance of having been designed, the solar system looks as though it was not designed. It appears to have originated just as astronomers claim.
The atheist seems to allow this conclusion: Man created God.
Nl, let me ask you. Does it look as though Man created Marduk, Ganesh, and leprechauns? I don’t think you should have any difficulty accepting the same conclusion as myself. You should, then, understand how men, and women, created beliefs about God. You can at least comprehend the process even as you reject it, in the case of God, for reasons attributable to faith.
The atheist seems to disallow this conclusion: God created man.
This seems like a biased prejudice to me where the atheist will only allow the conclusion that they wish for and want.
As an atheist I reject, as you do, all previous claims made by men of non-Judeo-Christian faiths that their various gods created the world and humans. You stand with me on this. Are you displaying a clear and biased prejudice against their beliefs, or do we both have good reason not to believe, for example, that the Earth rests on the back of a giant turtle, and so on?
As Dawkins says, we atheists simply go one god further.