I voted "other", because I believe in God (not gods).
Let´s demonstrate mathematicaly the possibility of God´s existence. Let´s imagine LOVE. When we say we love somebody or everybody, is there a limitation for that love? Does it have to stop at some level? The answer is NO! We can always increase indefinetely love. So, mathematicaly, love can tend to infinite! That demonstrate the possibility of God´s existence, because God is infinite love (by definition). So, all we have to do is to find somebody that can love beyond all limits, and we have the prof of the existence of God!!
(Of course that near those limits some strange phenomena must occur. It´s as simple as that!).
Quite the cross between ontology and pantheism.
*edit*And so long as God's existence is even possible, it follows that God must exist.
Most flawed logic I've ever heard (read, technically).
*edit again* I do understand what you're saying, but it's completely flawed. The pivotal implication is that since the argument opposing God invokes extreme improbability you can then exploit it and inaccurately apply it to an equation which sparks the following cascade of erroneous deduction.
My observation to this is no argument proves God or no god 100% That is why these are faith and probably issues. I have noted what parts of the argument are in my view most disputed. Be more specific, what is "completely flawed?" As you understand it, What is completely-extremely "improbable?" I don't see any real arguments here but argument by pejorative adjectives.
Out of respect I’ll elucidate my stance regarding improbability:
First off, there have been many refutations for god as he’s most commonly depicted, so here I’m only going to be referring to a deistic god.
The first problem is superfluousness. There is no need for a god, so interjecting one seems superfluous.
Second: Arguably the greatest attack against god’s existence is his vulnerability to a regression-based problem. “Who created God?” - “Well he’s always existed.” - “…and before that?” - etc. There’s a succession of infinite regressions which just seems, as others have described, pseudo-philosophical. Whatever made god must have been radically even more complex and consequently even more improbable. It’s a perfect inverse of an explanation.
But can you disprove god’s existence? No, you can’t. But there is the issue of probability.