The Greater Fool
Illuminator
I see. This is a massive pedantic quibble. When speaking of miracles, which I have repeatedly said do not exist, I must continually say "claims of miracles?"Modern miracles certainly can and have been examined rationally. All I know of that have been examined have been demonstrated, at least to the rational mind, as less miraculous and more firmly within the mundane. Yes, scientific principles establish what is, in fact, natural or mundane. "This miracle violates the known science" is not a debunking (though it is completely true), as again, miracle means that it is outside known science.
Which actual miracles have been examined by anything? Not just a claim of a miracle ... I want you to produce an example of an actual miracle that has been examined.
Look, you are not actually talking about any known miracles being examined by anything. All you have are claims of miracles.
Claims which have so far all been shown as untrue.
Perhaps you should read it again. Saying "This reply is less insightful and more irrational" means it is not at all insightful and completely lacks reason.The Greater Fool said:All I know of that have been examined have been demonstrated, at least to the rational mind, as less miraculous and more firmly within the mundane.
What do you mean merely "less miraculous"? Which "lesser" part of the claim was actually miraculous?
I have, in fact, said the opposite several times: There are no meddling god(s), thus no miracles. Interpreting this as implying the opposite is a nearly miraculous FAIL. None of your reply shows understanding of the actual point.The Greater Fool said:Yes, scientific principles establish what is, in fact, natural or mundane. "This miracle violates the known science" is not a debunking (though it is completely true), as again, miracle means that it is outside known science.
"The miracle violates the known science" (although completely true) is equally unsatisfactory at debunking holy writ miracles. Again, that it was called a miracle acknowledges it is outside of the natural or mundane. Unfortunately, unlike modern 'miracles', we have no way of examining the facts around the event.
Sorry but you are going around in your own circular argument like a mouse pedaling around a wheel. You are again trying to imply that there are indeed actual miracles that science cannot investigate. You just said "This miracle violates the known science" ... well, which miracle is that? Where is this miracle which you just said was "outside known science"?
Dictionary said:miracle
noun
1. an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers and is ascribed to a supernatural cause.
2. such an effect or event manifesting or considered as a work of God.
Trying to argue against miracles because they violate natural laws (again, absolutely true) is useless, because by definition miracles are miracles because they violate natural laws. If an all powerful meddling god existed, it could violate natural laws. However, there are no gods, thus they do not perform miracles.
I understand that people, in attempting to parse posts, sometimes lose track of actual arguments. To head off the very confusion your post seems to reveal, I make it very clear and repeatedly state There are no god(s), thus there are no miracles. Apparently, I did not say it often enough.Where is the miracle please? You do not actually have any miracles. All you have are untrue claims of miracles.
Do you see that you are replying to a straw man of your own creation? See how nonsensical the argument is in light of the whole thought?The Greater Fool said:If there were all powerful meddling god(s), miracles would be possible. Fortunately, at least for atheists, evidence is that there are no meddling god(s), thus no holy writ, no miracles, it's done. Until arguers settle the meddling god(s) argument, the others flowing from them are cart before the horse
What do you mean "If there were all powerful meddling god(s)"?? What you are claiming there is to say - "If there are gods producing miracles, then there are miracles"! You are just in a circular loop trying to say "if I define A to be true, then A is now true because I just said it was by my own invented definition!" ... if you had a miracle working god .... then you could have miracles ... but where is this miracle working god?, and where are the miracles??? ...
If there were meddling god(s), miracles would be possible. There are no gods, thus no miracles.
How is that not an extremely straight forward and obvious statement?
.... what you have is an unsubstantiated claim of a miracle working god, and loads of untrue claims of miracles ... and science can most certainly be used to investigate why you or anyone else claims to know gods and claims to witness or perform miracles.
For the sake of your understanding, I'm adding [claimed] before miracle so that you won't be confused.
Again, science can be, should be, and have been used to examine modern [claimed] miracles. When such [claimed] miracles are examined they are found to have mundane explanations. Scientific investigation can be performed on modern [claimed] miracles because the investigation is not confined to the claim alone. The debunking of the [claimed] miracle is not "It violates scientific laws", but rather the [claimed] miracle was found to have a mundane explanation.
Holy writ [claimed] miracles, unlike their modern counterparts, cannot be examined beyond the actual claim. As with their modern counterparts, holy write [claimed] miracles (by definition, see definition above) are outside of natural explanations, being caused by god. Saying they violate natural law is a logical absurdity, as that little fact is part of what 'miracle' means.
The fact that makes holy writ miracles fiction is that there are no gods, holy writ is fiction, there are no miracles.
I have not made a single claim that you attribute to me. I can't imagine why anyone would go to such extremes to misinterpret and distort pretty clearly stated points to arrive at the precisely opposite meaning. Or, was this a joke?
