So by that definition, whatever creates us needs to be more complex than us (I am more complicated than a keyboard). If you regress that thought you need more and more complex creators all the way back and you run into the irreducible complexity problem.
Thankyou for the link, a usefull reference point. I will however go beyond standard logical arguments, as again these are machinations of the human mind, a mind which came up with infinity
I don't see a requirement for a creator to be more complex than its creation as in the case of humanity and the keyboard. I would envisage a spectrum of varying degrees of complexity both in the creator and the creation.
There is a problem with the god that was always there. The first problem is that because of the complexity required you are positing a more improbable god and then willing it into existence. From our observation that god would have to be very very simple (to sidestep irreducible complexity), something that could not even be called a god by any human definition. It would simply be a set of laws that operates on some matter.
Yes, I see these two positions as polar opposites. I see a tendency in considering eternity along with infinity to veer off into polarities like this. I see this as primarily a limitation of humanity rather than of existence.
The other problem is that you redefine what it means to be infinite. The difference between finite and infinite is infinite

You can't approach infinity and be finite. There is an infinity of difference. That concept is self contradictory.
Yes, I doubt any attempts to apply infinity to anything which
exists, however I accept that existence may be infinite and so I have developed a concept of a value of such an enormous size that from our humble perspective it is equivalent to an infinite value, a horizon of sorts.
Without infinite*, considering infinity in this context is like balancing on the head of a pin(along with all those angels

).
Still another issue is that the mirror analogy creates a sort of wheel of time in which we sort of become the god of the past. The wheel has the same sort of problems with regression and the finite limit to infinity does not solve that.
Yes I see the point about the god of the past. I don't see it as a problem though, rather I see issues regarding the idea of regression itself to be the problem here.
While I would agree with you that we can't make the positive claim of there is no god, it would only be out of scientific honesty (intellectual fig leaf as piggy puts it) of not being able to prove a negative. For all practical purposes I would be comfortable in claiming that there is no god. The concept of god has no use in the world we live in and it doesn't seem to add any explanatory power. When invoked, it provides unfalsifiable claims that add nothing and hinder progress. We are better off pushing our boundaries of knowledge with the assumption that there is no god. If at the end we run into god, then we would all then be believers in that god since we would be dissecting it by that point
Yes the existence or not of gods is insignificant in our everyday lives. However I would not be happy in defining my reality in terms of relevance, as I am a truth seeker by nature.
For example one look into it and I realized a point that I should have been making. Manipulating is not creating. We do no create keyboards. We manipulate existing matter to arrange it into a keyboard. I don't poof a keyboard into existence.
Yes, For this line of reasoning I am regarding creating as manipulating. We may come onto other uses later.