How could a creator have zero complexity yet create something with complexity?
I already suggested in this thread (a few times) that the creator used himself as material for the universe, either by thinking it up (simulating the universe in his "brain") or reconfiguring his "body" to serve as the universe. This is just a fanciful notion that I don't put any faith in, but it would explain how the universe could be created without an increase in complexity, or at least a significant one.
A created creator? A non-first cause?
Did you not read the rest of my sentence? "It could be that the formation of a creator according to the laws of a different universe was much more likely than the formation of intelligent life on earth". Yes, I am suggesting a creator ex nihilo. My point is that this could be much more likely than we realize if we knew the starting conditions before the creator came about. This is currently unknowable.
Evolution doesn't choose and is never done.
These superficial objections are very tiresome, as well as predictable. Obviously I don't mean that evolution can "choose" something consciously. Are you seriously suggesting that scientists don't personify nature when they write about evolution? If you don't think so, shall I dig up some examples from Dawkins et al. for you to read? If you do think so, do you write to them complaining about their terminology, or am I the sole focal point of your attention for some lucky reason?
And I was clearly not referring to the results of evolution as "done". I was referring to a particular point of view, which is why I said "when its 'creations' are looked at as finished products". People do this all the time when they criticize things like the roundabout nerve in the giraffe's neck or anything else that could have been designed better. They are criticizing the result of a process that had a good reason to happen that way because it developed in logical steps through successive prior organisms.
The point I am making, and which risks getting lost in pedantry, is that the concept of a god, when looked at as a finished product, seems complex, but that doesn't mean it couldn't come about through a simple process, step by step, and possibly one that was more likely than the process which produced intelligence on Earth.
Personally I am dubious that intelligence is so unlikely; it feels to me like it might be a natural result of the same tendency towards complexity that produced the first cell, but that's just a feeling I have without any scientific backup. So instead I am pointing to statements made by some scientists about the unlikelihood of our existence and suggesting that if we knew how the (proposed) creator developed, it could be that the creator is relatively more likely than we are.