My issues with [1] – [7] arise in [4] (as you predict in [5]) and continue through [7].
You say in [4] that our mind, intellect, and free will are “spiritual realities.” In order to properly formulate a response, I’d need to know what you mean by “spiritual.“ Presumably the word spiritual applies to some sort of nonphysical reality, but does it apply to any sort of nonphysical or only a particular type (in other words, can there be a nonphysical reality that is not spiritual)? And what are the boundaries? If someone is a non-reductive physicalist when it comes to theory of mind, are the mental realities they believe in “spiritual” ones because they don’t reduce to the physical, or are they something else because they supervene on the physical? This will be important later on.
In [5], you ask that if we have objections to [4] (which I’m not sure I do until you define “spiritual“) that we “quantify” our free will in term of “shape, size, color and weight.” You’re setting up a dichotomy that if one doesn’t think that free will, etc., are “spiritual,“ then one must be a reductive physicalist. This is only a true dichotomy if you are defining “spiritual” broadly enough to include the various types of non-reductive physicalism OR if you think that non-reductive physicalism has been disproved, which is something I don’t accept as a given and would need you to argue for.
It’s also worth point out that a reductive physicalist (which I am not, but I consider it a live option) could, in response to your challenge, say that free will does have color, weight, etc., and that question could be answered in principle, but we lack the technology and understanding to answer it in practice. So when you say “We can’t say, yet it exist,“ you are just pointing out the ignorance of the reductive physicalist – which they would admit to – and not showing that they are wrong or that your “spiritual“ explanation succeeds. Your explanation must stand on its own; it doesn’t win by default.
Also in [5] you say “It is a fact that every HUMAN -Soul [for this discussion being defined as that thing which animates Life], has exclusively these spiritual realities permanently attached to it. And it this, what I have come to term; ‘our other self’ that survives the mortal body, and faces eternal judgment; and hence explains the existence of God, the Universe and humanity.” That is a jaw-droppingly bold assertion, and I can’t let it slide.
I view life as a physical process, not as a metaphysical “animating force” of some kind. So how does your view of a “soul” fit with that? Do we say that process itself is what we call a soul? You could make that move, but then what happens to the assertion that the soul survives the body, faces eternal judgment, etc.? It doesn’t work, so you would likely say that I’m wrong and that life is a force.” Alright, show me that, but realize your work does not end there. Even if I accept that there is some sort of “animating force,“ how do I know that it is eternal survives physical death, faces eternal judgment, or explains the existence of God?
On to [6]. You say “like must come from like.“ Man has “spirit,“ and that comes from God who is spirit. If like comes from like, and God is spirit, whence comes the physical? And if we are including non-reductive physicalist theories of mind as being “spiritual” (which you may not, but that hurts your dichotomy in [5]), then we can say that there are instances where like does not come from like.
In [7]d you ask two questions. This first is “WHY does humanity exist?” To this we can supply the standard explanation of humankind arriving through the process of evolution by natural selection.
The second question, “And HOW can we and the universe exist without a first cause?”, assumes that atheists and agnostics reject the idea of a first cause. This is not the case. Very few (I can’t think of any) think the universe came from literally, absolutely nothing. And few believe in something like infinite regress. There are some who do think that there is a “first cause” of some sort, just that this cause does not fit the description of “God” (I’m in this camp, but it’s worth noting that I don’t rule out infinite regress as a possibility). And most, I think, withhold judgment. So it’s not fair to assume that we believe there is no first cause and challenge us on that point.
[cont.]