Agreed.
You will have to define woo first.

As far as i can tell I am not especially susceptible to it... still as apparently you and gord are not comprehending my argument, I'll restate it more clearly --
Right, now I have always been VERY clear i think that I define supernatural by the etymological root, super = "above", nature ="time/space". A supernatural entity is one (by the definition I employ here) that transcends Space/Time. In fact I dedicated a whole post to clarifying this earlier? Regardless of whether you accept my definition or not, the problem remains (and I know I have to address MM's objection) of methodological naturalism in science.
Now to understand my post above you have to know that methodological naturalism is simply the premise employed in science that if something happens, we can explain it in terms of lawful, natural actions - causality. It excludes any supernatural causality. Look the term up, and you will see I am not redefining it, or inventing anything, though my discussion with MM above should have shown you this. Here is the wiki link we both invoked --
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalism_(philosophy)#Methodological_and_Metaphysical_Naturalism
It's hardly rockest science. Also assumed (to overcome the Induction Problem (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_of_induction )) is uniformity of nature - that nature works the same way everywhere, eternally. That is less relevant here.
Now let's go through my post again
Sentence 1. "I said Invisible Goblins are a naturalistic hypothesis, and hence subject to scientific scrutiny."
Right - naturalistic - Invisible Goblins are natural if they exist, because being in nature they must be part of nature. They would not be supernatural, as not external to the world. Therefore such enties would be within the scope of scientific enquiry.
Sentence 2. I asserted Zeus and my God were not
- Both Zeus and God are defined as by classical formulations like the Creeds and legends as supernatural, and in the case of the Christian God the terms employed are Transcendent (outside of time/space = my supernatural) and Immanent (acting within Time/Space = nature.) So my point was that Zeus and God are defined as not within the naturl order, so supernatural.
Sentence 3. They can act upon nature, but as any activity in nature will appear naturalistic, how would you detect that?
-Now remember methodological naturalism? We have defined supernatural entities as not part of the purview of science by this premise, the standard default assumption of science. So let's just explain this more clearly -- from an earlier post on another thread
"My first contention is that any Supernatural action within the Universe is by definition therefore Natural, and will manifest in terms of Natural Law. That manifestation may be highly unusual, or extremely rare, but it would not be as in Hume's famous definition of a miracle a violation of Natural Law, as by definition anything that occurs in Nature is Natural.
Therfore, I contend that supernatural causation would be effectively invisible to our naturalistic Science, which by definition is bounded by the natural. While logic and reason (and perhaps mathematics) might be used to explore what lies "beyond" the Universe, experimental and procedural science can not. As a "supernatural event" becomes natural by definition as soon as it occurs in the universe, Science will indeed find no "miracles" - which is not to say that supernatural interventions do not occur. One could only hope to establish if this was the case by logic or reason. Professor Dawkins has suggested that the law of Nature in a Universe created by a deity should look quite different from those in one without - but that we will have to address later.
Let me give a playful example. Let us assume that the Norse Trickster God Loki built the universe. His handiwork is the Laws of Nature, and any examination thereof will reveal nothing but Natural forces acting in accordance with Natural Law. Any arbitrary exception he introduced, such as the Duckbill platypus (I know it's quite explicable really, but you get my point!)would be quite Natural, and entirely explicable by Science. Then imagine a Scientist who looks at the world and says "There is no Loki". Yet equally rational is the Loki-ist theologians, who looks at the same Science and says "we can not see Loki, but we can learn the nature of Loki from his handiwork!" The Loki-ist might remark after JBS Haldane that Loki appears to have "an inordinate fondness for beetles!""
Sentence 4. That is not to say one might not test the Zeus and God hypothesis, but not by experimental science.
I think this goes without saying. The argument science can tell us nothing about God is pointless, as by definition science excludes those questions, and so is merely a circular argument - a point only MM has contested really.
I'll have a look. However i hope now you can see i am not trolling - indeed I find the suggestion I am mildly amusing.
cj x