Grief, on 05 May 2015 - 05:01 PM, said:
QuickTidal, on 04 May 2015 - 06:26 PM, said:
I think that the important question is what if science doesn't find an answer? And your post itself contains the answer to this question -- "those things could very well be explained by science". This is an appeal to the future; the belief isn't just that the things that have been explained by science are not miracles, it's that the things that currently haven't been explained, will be. So where do we draw the line? I'm curious as to at what point you would allow that something might be miraculous (rather than not yet explained but likely to be explained in the future), and I think this is the issue that Powder was getting at. Would a scientific mindset ever really allow that possibility?
I'm the guy who until science explained it would assume that science COULD eventually. Like you mentioned in your earlier post. I'm not sure if I could look at something miraculous and see it any other way.
Grief, on 05 May 2015 - 05:01 PM, said:
Oh, apologies. I just meant that science is a ubiquitous with defining the natural aspects and occurrences of the planet. We didn't know why, for example, cats purr for the longest time....but recent research has found a very scientific answer in that some experts to believe that this uniquely feline vocalization is actually a method of self-healing. A domestic cat's purr has a frequency of between 25 and 150 Hertz, which happens to be the frequency at which muscles and bones best grow and repair themselves.
Science has explained enough over the years that were once thought to be "miraculous" that the deck is kind of stacked against a nebulous "miracle event". I think the best place to look for that is in pagan mythologies which tried to explain the natural world by creating gods who did those things. The seas are angry and writhing, and so Poseidon is angry with you. The sky is lighting up and roaring..so Thor is pounding away with his hammer. These would have been miraculous things...but they are scientifically explainable now.
But I think you make a good point. I can't disprove miracles as miracles, unless they can be scientifically proven as something else at some point. I've just seen enough miraculous things disproven under science to be wary, I guess?