Another quote:
[Discussing the partial reflection of light by glass]
Try as we might to invent a reasonable theory that can explain how a photon "makes up its mind" whether to go through glass or bounce back, it is impossible to predict which way a given photon will go. Philosophers have said that if the same circumstances don't always produce the same results, predictions are impossible and science will collapse. Here is a circumstance -- identical photons are always coming down in the same direction to the same piece of glass -- that produces different results. We cannot predict whether a given photo will arrive at A or B [reflected or pass through]. All we can predict is that out of 100 photons that come down, an average of 4 will be reflected by the front surface [of the piece of glass]. Does this mean that physics, a science of great exactitude, has been reduced to calculating only the probability of an event, and not predicting exactly what will happen? Yes. That's a retreat, but that's the way it is: Nature premits us to calculate only probabilities. Yet science has not collapsed.
Richard Feynman, QED. Page 19. (Nobel Prize in physics, 1965)
If you use arguments from physics to try and prove your position, you will attract the attention of physicists, and they will offer an opinion about your understanding of their science. If you talk about logic, you'll have the opinion of logicians.
Suppose you take your theory to a physicist, and he rejects it on account of your representation of Quantum theory. You can say it's because he is atheistic and is predisposed to reject deism on that ground.
You go to a theologian, and he sees that business about the Goddess creating one universe but not the others. He will say, that's interesting, but you're rehashing Plotinus, Proclus, and the Gnostics, and they have a more solid theological grounding. Read their works and the critiques, and get back to us. Your theologian may be an atheist, too.
Sooner or later, you may run out of acceptable peers to review your work.