Sure, I understand that. I thought my tangent might interest you, but if it doesn't I'll drop out. I don't want to frustrate your attempts at a discussion, but I often suspect something beneath the surface. In this case it seems this might become your reason to dismiss miracles, so I was trying to get you to think about them differently.
No, my primary reason to dismiss miracles is that, in every instance, it seems like a
lack of knowledge which is leading people to
attribute the miracle to God.
Attribution of causes should be done through an
increase in knowledge.
Essentially, all miracles I've heard of end up being arguments from ignorance or god-of-the-gaps.
Let me back up, then. He survived crucifixion. The soldiers impaled him with a spear, and concluded he was dead. Those who took him off the cross and buried him thought he was dead. He was taken down, bleeding from wounds to the head (crown), back (flogging), hands & feet (crucifixion), and abdomen (spear). His body had had only a very restricted oxygen supply for multiple hours (crucifixion again). Then he laid in a vermin infested hole in the ground for 3 days without medical treatment. And here he is walking around like he's ready for a game of soccer.
Do you really think Bob is just going to shrug and walk away? Bob is pretty jaded. Too bad.
If all that happened*, Bob would (or should) devote the rest of his life to figuring out how it happened because it is so exceedingly unlikely and defies all our notions and understandings of biological processes. He should also ensure that it was not a delusion of some sort and would need to confirm that his mind was not tricking him in some way or that someone was not playing some elaborate prank. If, at the end of his life, Bob has never been able to figure out how it happened he should say, "I don't know how this happened." Full stop.
Why? Because it's the truth. He never figured it out.
(*Notice the big if. That is if it all happened and Bob
witnessed it himself. If Bob heard it from someone else, he should probably approach the claim with extreme skepticism. Why? Because the reliability of the witness is questionable especially seeing as the mind can easily deceive itself into seeing something that wasn't, or the fact that the mind is quite bad at reconstructing memories, or the fact that stories tend to get exaggerated over time. So perhaps the witness actually just "felt this presence" of the dead person near them and then, because of emotional distress and the intense desire to have the person back, exaggerated the memory (knowingly or unknowingly) into a physical person. We have seen that the mind has almost no limit of self-deception and we have also seen and studied the flaws of memory. We have seen and studied the effects of people being so certain of a falsehood. We have never seen someone be resurrected. So which is more likely?
Now if Bob had heard it from someone else via a 2000 year old book written even 5 - 10 years after the event....err. I don't know...I just...can't...get there. There's so many more likely explanations which
don't involve re-thinking out entire understanding of biological processes.)