And? So they just have further confirmation that they exist.
Contemporary science offers very different descriptions of how the universe works. Observable laws still operate, but they are activated by chance. Thus, in the emerging picture offered by contemporary science there is a dynamic of structured randomness both in the activity of subatomic particles and in the macro world of evolving stars and planets. In evolutionary perspective, the world appears to be self-creating. It may be a purposeless process, in which case the emergence of human beings is a fortuitous accident. Or it may have purpose, rooted in a Divine Intelligence Who fashioned human beings for Himself.
In any case, science no longer corresponds to anyone's common sense. Whether there is room in such an evolving universe for God — and therefore the kinds of divine action assumed by miracles — is a legitimate, even pressing issue, which contemporary philosophers, theologians, and scientists are pursuing with considerable intellectual vigor.
If the universe at the smallest sub-atomic level is indeed random chance as science is indeed beginning to postulate - then common sense can not be applied to it any longer. Nothing is certain - all is random chance guided only by the mind of the one who perceives it. If the universe and all we observe is indeed merely what we perceive it to be upon the perception of it, as is now becoming standard dogma in scientific circles, then we all perceive the same random chance creating the same unavoidable laws we understand are active in the universe despite claims of randomness.
So you perceive the same random universe that I perceive - despite it being random and only existing in our perceptions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagen_interpretation
All common sense has departed, which means that what one perceives to be a miracle and what one perceives to be random chance - is indeed only in the eye of the beholder in both cases - either reality being completely valid in a universe in which common sense has been deprived.