Agreed. But you still need the basics in place.
But lets take the moon again. Would you agree if there "were lots of attempts" to get the right size and right orbit then logically earth would have lots of moons.
If there were lots of attempts to get a planet of earth's size and orbit then surely there would be a lot more planets.
Since we have only one moon and there are only 9 planets (and with none of the others even being close to the requirements) then logic would suggest that the moon and earth were first attempts.
And just for fun, what about the moon being the same apparent size as the sun so we can have an eclipse?
If you take all of it then the chances of it happening are about 10 zillion trillion billion times less than have the winning lotto ticket every week and your wife has second prize every week. In other words, getting very close to meeting the definition of impossible.
So logically it is either supernatural or something else but chance would be eliminated.
The universe is big, really really big.
Certainly if it were the case that all of the 'attempts' to get Earth, the Moon, etc, just right were carried out in the same location, we would see evidence of them here.
But it doesn't need to work like that - the universe is big - the 'attempts' - in all their subtle variations, are distributed all over - this is the one that worked, therefore, we can be here to talk about it.
This place isn't special in order to let us be here. We're here because it's special enough that it could happen.
In all the other places in the universe where the conditions are not 'just right', and luck
didn't strike, there won't be anybody there to notice or complain, because the conditions don't permit it.
The other thing to note is that the conditions here could probably have been a bit different, or the dice could have fallen differently, and life could have developed, but not like it is now.
Looking at the result of something arising from a long sequence of choices can give rise to the incorrect conclusion that because it's unlikely, it should never have happened - for example:
Take a deck of 52 cards, shuffle them and deal them out in a row. You always end up with a sequence of 52 different cards, but the chance of getting
any specific, exact sequence is 1 in 8*10^67
-You just routinely performed an event that only happens one time out of every 80 million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million million times
You always get a result. Any
very specific result is very unlikely. In a universe of attempts, lots of different results happen. We're in one of them.