- it depends on your definition of supernatural. It is a word that morphs. Science can only say whether it fits the model or not. The reason why the unexplained happens and the context in which it happens , and whether some evidence can ever fit the model then becomes a debate. Science cannot answer this. It is too limited. If all science has is models for red, blue and green, it cannot declare yellow.
God is not in the model.
- Let me explain what science "is". It documents repeatable phenomena and takes logical extrapolations of them. Mindgame. If blocks of pure granite shaped as mice, always levitated with a resistance to displacement related to mass, there would by now be a formula for it. It would be declared "natural" and "science" that granite does that. Science did not explain it, it incorporates what it normally observes. The model is not fundamental, it is empirical , axiomatic, and codifies observation. At the bottom level it cannot say what is the underlying reality it models. It cannot say what our senses cannot detect, and are not needed for advantage of survival.
- Heart myocardium was found to have appeared progressively on what was a eucharist wafer, and had characteristics that have no known method to fake even in a lab, and pathologists say they are inexplicable.
Another cardiologist just wrote a book on them. He agrees too.
That makes it evidence with or without explanation. The model must be consistent with evidence. The evidence does not have to follow the model.
I can reasonably also say it is Evidence of God.
Why? because that is consistent with catholic dogma, and that idea is found NOWHERE else. That however it appears (the appearance and substance are two different things) the eucharist IS the body and blood as per John 6, and believed by all early christians. It is evidence, but it is of course not Proof. There is no proof of abiogenesis from chemical soup either.
The fact so called eucharistic miracles happened in nature a few times, also makes it "natural" , that is what natural means. That It happens.
Abiogenesis from soup yet has to pass the "natural" test. It does not happen and cannot be made to happen. In fact nobody has a full process for it. Its an idea not a natural reality.
- Let us take a middle ground which does not imply God, only whether consciousness is confined to a body. Existence without interaction.
Consciousness is experience which can only be anecdotal. There is plenty of anecdotal evicence of experience of events that cannot have been known by the experiencer if they were confined only to a functioning brain. It is not testable or measurable, but neither can it be explained away by coincidence. I related the incident that got Greyson interested who established the scientific study of Near Death Experience. An unconscious patient described a meeting elsewhere in a building, including not only the tie he was wearing, but a mark caused by dropping food on it. She cannot have known either that the visitor came, the meeting happened, what tie he wore or the damage. Increasing evidence says the brain and the mind are two different things.
- Not all is amenable to test. Not all things are controllable. As a mindgame, nobody can do a double blind trial on whether parachutes save lives in failing aircraft. The evidence is only anecdotal both ways.It is certainly accepted by all. Or whether twins can sense the death of the other twin as another example. That can never be trialled. But in many instances say some twins have shown they have!
- I also am not as cynical about the value of witness evidence. We have dealt with the prophecy of fatima so I will pick another. So let us take the visions of Zeitoun witnessed by a million across all walks of life, and photographed by some. The images were not created by optical trickery. Firstly because you cannot create an real image in free space. Also They tried turning the power off, so it was not a projection. It was before photoshop or holography.
- I am not as cynical about the efforts of professionals. Two doctors determined to debunk the inedia of the paralysed alexandrina da costa, kept her in hospital under secure gard for 20 days. People entering and leaving were searched. When she had not eaten or drunk, urinated or defecated, they were determined to lock down even more. After 40 days, the medics gave up and decided it was nexplicable by science. People who do not drink ., should lose weight and die. She didnt. Her metabolism was as healthy on day 40 as day 1. Nor was she the last or the first. Marthe Robin and Therese neummann were the same.
- The prophesied stigmata of Katya Rivas was watched by capable witnesses on continuous rolling time stamped film footage. The marks appeared by themselves. Even if you conjecture the wounds were self inflicted ( they were not because of witnesses and live footage) , there is no way they could heal in hours. No plastic surgeon could do it. But They did. And Whilst we are discussing Katya, she could write books live for hours on camera, never pausing, crossing out, and also quoting references word perfect. If you think that is still not extraordinary enough then try explaining how she wrote in languages she did not know. Take polish. And she wrote continously. Not stopping, or pausing or slowing down. Katya was poorly educated Where did that knowledge come from, she cannot have experienced i?
Therese neummann spoke aramaic . She was a peasant with little or no education.
And so on.
There are many examples of things that are not just unexplained, they happen in a theistic context, and science would need rewriting to explain them.
So yes I have evidence.
I also have a library of things that I have either put on the "cannot say either way" pile, many of which I have on the reject pile. Something in the evidence does not stack up.. The ones I relate are the ones which pass a level of scrutiny
First off: it's a relatively easy matter to do "interlinear" comments. Just paste "[/" and "quote]" after a line and then past "[" and "quote]" at the beginning of a line.
But to your points:
1) You seem hung up on the experience of reality being only a proxy for reality. That's fair enough and I can't really argue against it. But it also holds for all your religious beliefs as well. Any critique of the limits of science is doubly so for religious thought.
2) You are still not quite getting the point that if you wish to propose any supernatural event you must admit you have absolutely ZERO evidence for it. We are, by the essence of our existence, limited solely to the physical world.
So, yes, there are experiences which may only give us a guide to reality (like Plato's Cave) but that's the thing...we HAVE that. It is repeatable across all observers regardless of faith.
Religious experience? Not so much.