The following is relevant to theistic evolution, although it may not be immediately obvious.
How could we recognize God?
If God appeared as a marmot on a rock, or as a human, would we recognize God?
We would not. We would see a marmot, or a person. Multitudes saw a person 2,000 years ago, but none recognized God. Many accepted God as an act of faith, but faith based acceptance is not the same thing as recognition. So, if God appeared before us, how would we be able to know that it was God?
This is an important question, because we are challenged by atheistic scoffers, "If God exists, where is he?"
"God is the elephant that is not in the living room," they say.
In an age of science, nothing that we can recognize at all could be recognized as a supernatural entity ... as God. This is because if it is something we can recognize then there must be some pattern to it, and patterns which we observe are the objects of study of science. Ultimately, they are mathematically describable and that which we describe mathematically we say we have understood scientifically. Since science studies nature, what we have understood scientifically we will see as being part of nature. That which is part of nature is not supernatural. So we would not be able to recognize the supernatural aspect of God in nature, even if every cricket is an aspect of God.
Since what is regular is the subject of science and is thereby relegated to the category natural, the only perceivable thing left that could be the supernatural aspect of God is the irregular. By this, I mean something without pattern.
What perceivable thing could be without pattern?
The sequence of numbers typically obtained in consecutive rolls of an unbiased die has the appearance of being irregular, or, to use a better word ... random. If such a sequence were random, and there is a case to be made that it is pseudorandom rather than truly random, then we would have one of the simplest exemplars of the type of phenomenon which could be a perceivable supernatural aspect of God. It is a phenomenon in which nothing is recognizable.
We could recognize God only in that which is unrecognizeable.
It is a bit of a leap, but this illustrates that the answer to the title question is that the (supernatural) God cannot be recognized because there is nothing to recognize in that perceivable aspect of God. The only aspect of God that is recognizeable is natural.
A sceptic (to use Pascal's word) can not be shown anything that he would recognize as supernatural, because anything recognizable can be analyzed as part of nature.
How could we recognize God?
If God appeared as a marmot on a rock, or as a human, would we recognize God?
We would not. We would see a marmot, or a person. Multitudes saw a person 2,000 years ago, but none recognized God. Many accepted God as an act of faith, but faith based acceptance is not the same thing as recognition. So, if God appeared before us, how would we be able to know that it was God?
This is an important question, because we are challenged by atheistic scoffers, "If God exists, where is he?"
"God is the elephant that is not in the living room," they say.
In an age of science, nothing that we can recognize at all could be recognized as a supernatural entity ... as God. This is because if it is something we can recognize then there must be some pattern to it, and patterns which we observe are the objects of study of science. Ultimately, they are mathematically describable and that which we describe mathematically we say we have understood scientifically. Since science studies nature, what we have understood scientifically we will see as being part of nature. That which is part of nature is not supernatural. So we would not be able to recognize the supernatural aspect of God in nature, even if every cricket is an aspect of God.
Since what is regular is the subject of science and is thereby relegated to the category natural, the only perceivable thing left that could be the supernatural aspect of God is the irregular. By this, I mean something without pattern.
What perceivable thing could be without pattern?
The sequence of numbers typically obtained in consecutive rolls of an unbiased die has the appearance of being irregular, or, to use a better word ... random. If such a sequence were random, and there is a case to be made that it is pseudorandom rather than truly random, then we would have one of the simplest exemplars of the type of phenomenon which could be a perceivable supernatural aspect of God. It is a phenomenon in which nothing is recognizable.
We could recognize God only in that which is unrecognizeable.
It is a bit of a leap, but this illustrates that the answer to the title question is that the (supernatural) God cannot be recognized because there is nothing to recognize in that perceivable aspect of God. The only aspect of God that is recognizeable is natural.
A sceptic (to use Pascal's word) can not be shown anything that he would recognize as supernatural, because anything recognizable can be analyzed as part of nature.
He said, "The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of God has been given to you, but to others I speak in parables, so that, "'though seeing, they may not see; though hearing, they may not understand." (Luke 8:10)
This is relevant to theistic evolution, intelligent design, creation science, et al. For now, though, this is long enough.
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