Kind of. That's why we try to establish criteria about what is acceptable and unacceptable evidence before we go on fishing expeditions. Had you been born in ancient greece years ago you would have been one of the first to stumble onto a basic tenet of the scientific method.That's just it. Cognitive biases affect what an individual even accepts as evidence, and what is rejected. This has less to do with the source or type of evidence, and more to do with subconsciously confirming and preserving firmly held beliefs, or, worldviews. Cognitive dissonance must be resolved, and the brain reinforces efficiency over logic.
To the OP; I have to confess I don't think miracles (ie., a temporary suspension of the natural order for somebody's benefit) will ever be a more reasonable explanation for a phenomena than science and some brute statistics. If miracles DO happen then by their nature we can't ever really know it, therefore I choose to behave as if they don't happen.
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