Take for example the young woman who fell from a plane, her shoot didn't open and she not only survived the fall, but her fetus did as well. Miracle, defies physical laws of survival.
I didn't know that there were "physical laws of survival"? First I have heard of them. Anyway, it would seem that not everyone who hits the ground without a fully deployed chute ends up in a coffin. So what? Actually, the amniotic sack is a very good shock absorber. It's a bit like being inside a water balloon. I don't see why the fetus could survive if the mother did. In fact, I don't see why the mother surviving is impossible either. Due to terminal speeds in a fluid you can only reach a top speed of around 120 mph, if memory serves. So it doesn't matter if you are jumping four stories or four thousand feet, you will strike the ground at the same speed.
Again, it is unexpected that someone would survive such a fall, but it is not unprecedented. Miracles would be something like an amputee spontaneously regrowing a leg in a matter of microseconds.
So how then would the possiblity of god/gods/God address these "miracles". Well, if god/gods/God don't exist, they are flukes, oddities, unexplained happenings, something to explore, If god/gods/God exists, then we would expect to see such things as a demonstration of the power of a being greater than ourselves. kInd of like an "I'm here" sign. To how much power would be a question to ask the believers of the individual dieties.
I think the sudden regrowing (within microseconds) of an amputated leg would be on the scale needed. It should also be mentioned that the god proposed, the Judeo-Christian God, is capable of anything so no proposal, no matter how preposterous, should be within the capabilities of this deity.
If I turn on the television, I don't have to sit there cranking a knob or acting, in order for it to function.
And we can go to a television factory and watch humans make tv's. We have evidence of the designer outside of the actual design. This is no different than Paley's Watchmaker argument, and it was refuted long ago.
Question: But perhaps more importantly is this: if there is no evidence that can be against a god (a god might not choose to make complexity, for instance, so nothingness would not be evidence against a god either), then no evidence can be considered to be for a god.
Razzle: Not following you here.
When trying to detect something it is just as important to predict what one SHOULD NOT find as it is what one SHOULD find. If every possible outcome is evidence of the actions of a deity then the proposal is useless. We need something to distinguish between the actions of a deity and the non-action of a deity.
How do we determine such, as in the theory of evolution, we predict what we would expect to see and then test that prediction. If the test evidences the prediction then we predict and test again, over time, we become convinced that our theory is right.
And you have missed a very important concept. The ToE makes predictions of things WE SHOULD NOT SEE. For instance, we should not see birds with teats, or bats with feathers. We should see genetic, morphological, and physiological features that fit into a strict nested hierarchy. Anything that does not fit into that nested hierarchy should NOT BE SEEN. This is why the ToE is testable, and why the actions of deities are not.
So what potential and possible phenomena should we NOT see if a god or gods exist?
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