Now, without knowing anything about that cause, we already know logically that it is spaceless, timeless, immaterial, (since it created space, time, and matter/energy) and based on the fine tuning of the universe it seems to have exhibited an incredible level of intelligence... If that isn't God then I don't know what is.
You basically just said "I don't know what happened so I believe God did it." The honest answer is just "I don't know."
And fine tuned for life?
The universe is extremely
hostile to life. Extinction level events have nearly eliminated complex life on Earth on
five separate occasions. Of all the species that have ever lived 99.9% are
now extinct. Furthermore, normal matter like stars and planets occupy less than
0.0000000000000000000042 percent of the observable universe. Life constitutes an
even smaller fraction of that matter again. If the universe is fine-tuned for anything it is for the
creation of black holes and empty space.
There is nothing to suggest that human life, our planet or our universe are
uniquely privileged nor intended. On the contrary, the sheer
scale of the universe in both
spaceand
time and our understanding of
its development indicate we are
non-central to the scheme of things; mere products of chance, physical laws and evolution. To believe otherwise amounts to an
argument from incredulity and a hubris mix of
anthropocentrism and
god of the gaps thinking.
The conditions that we observe, namely, those around our Sun and on Earth, simply
seem fine-tuned to us because we evolved to suit them. We cannot prove that all other
possible forms of life would be infeasible with a different set of conditions or constants because the only universe that
we can observe is the one we occupy. Indeed,
modelling suggests star formation (a necessary precursor to our form of biology) may be viable under a number of different universal conditions.
Without actual proof of creation,
naturalistic explanations for the properties of this universe cannot be wholly ruled out. It is possible an
infinity of universes exist, all with different conditions and forms of life. The fact that our particular universe has the
physical constants we observe may be no more to the point than the fact a hand of cards, dealt from a shuffled deck, is the one a hypothetical player holds. Though the chances of any one universe being hospitable to life might be low, the
conditional probability of a form of life
observing a set of constants
suitable to it is exactly unity. That is to say, every possible universe would ‘appear’ fine-tuned to the form of life it harbours, while all those inhospitable universes would never be observed by life at all.