This is the Deist’s position, and it is an intellectually serious one. The evidence from physics and philosophy establishes — at most — a first cause: something uncaused, eternal, non-physical, and of sufficient power to produce the universe. This cause may be impersonal. It may be something like a fundamental principle of existence, a necessary ground of being, without any of the characteristics we associate with personhood — without awareness, without intention, without love.
The Deist accepts the cosmological and fine-tuning arguments and stops there. The God of the Deist is the watchmaker who set the universe in motion and stepped back. The question is whether there is reason to go further.
The consciousness argument pushes further
The argument from consciousness suggests that the first cause is not merely powerful but mental. If consciousness cannot be reduced to physical processes — if there is an irreducibly non-physical dimension to subjective experience — then the physical universe contains something that physical causes alone cannot account for. The existence of consciousness in the universe requires, at minimum, that consciousness is the kind of thing the universe can produce. And a universe that produces consciousness from a source that is itself non-conscious seems to require more explanation than a universe whose ground is itself conscious.
The philosopher who exists in a universe of pure matter, trying to explain how matter produces the felt qualities of experience, has a much harder problem than the philosopher whose universe has a conscious ground. The first cause that explains the emergence of consciousness in the universe is more plausibly a conscious first cause than an unconscious one.
The moral argument pushes further still
If moral facts are real and require grounding in something that can sustain objective normative reality — something that is not just descriptively powerful but normatively significant — then the first cause must be not only conscious but good. The ground of objective value cannot itself be morally neutral. A universe whose ground is good explains the existence of objective moral facts in a way that a universe whose ground is merely powerful does not.
The fine-tuning argument suggests care
The calibration of the universe for conscious life suggests that the first cause’s output was not accidental. A universe set up with this degree of precision for the production of conscious beings is at least consistent with a first cause that had conscious beings in mind. This is not proof — but it is the beginning of the inference from a powerful first cause to a first cause with something like intention.
From intention to relationship
A conscious first cause that is also the ground of goodness and that calibrated the universe for the existence of conscious beings capable of moral reflection — that first cause is no longer obviously impersonal. It has the properties of a mind, of a moral agent, and of something that appears to have cared enough about conscious life to make it possible. The step from this to a God who communicates with conscious beings is not, given this description, an enormous one. It is the natural expectation from a being of this kind — which is precisely the argument made in the article on divine communication.