Paul2
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2004
- Messages
- 8,553
1. Your definition of supernatural is fundamentally flawed because all one has to do is to redfine the laws to account for that which is initially labelled as supernatural, so your definition is no definition at all.The "supernatural" consists of all those things that are not explainable by laws. Spousal salinification is a supernatural phenomenon.
2. A better definition that meets the objection in #1 is "The supernatural consists on one-time phenomena." But the big bang was a one-time phenomenon and there is plenty of scientific, natural law being theorized about that.
"Supernatural" is the same kind of flawed category as "alternative medicine" is. (As Dr. Dean Edell says, there are only 3 types of medicine: that which works, that which doesn't, and that which we aren't sure about.) The categories of the supernatural and alternative medicine mess up the underlying principles on which we should make categories in those disciplines.