"You’ve done exactly the same as the others - ignored what’s there."
Thankyou for your opinion of my views, Naomi- however, my view is that God, in repenting (or regretting, as you put it) that He made man is not in any way evidence of failure on the part of God. We're also told in the Bible that God repented that He made Saul King. The difference (I would understand) would be that God's repentance happens in spite of perfect foreknowledge, while most human repentance happens because we lack foreknowledge.
//You ask many questions in the original post//"No - I asked one." Really? I counted five.
As for your view about my "flawed analogy"; two points- firstly, as a human being, any points I make are likely to be flawed; as are yours. Secondly, I am not actually drawing any analogy; simply pointing out that quoting the words of others (whoever they be) are important, and help to illustrate our views, often in better ways than we can. The point I was making about Nobel prize-winning scientists is that many of them make observations (some based on science, many not) which are worthy of quoting. Personally, I find quotations from others fascinating and invaluable when trying to gain knowledge of any subject. On the subject of God, I am interested in the quotations of others, whether they agree with my view or not. (If this were not the case, I would provide you plenty of quotations by scientists about their views on the existence of God, none of which would prove or disprove His existence). Even quotations from people (such as poets, authors etc) not based on reason, logic, or fact, are interesting and can give us insights. That was my point.