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PeterJ
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Could anyone point me to any atheistic responses to the miracle of the sun at Fatima?
heres one:Could anyone point me to any atheistic responses to the miracle of the sun at Fatima?
Emile Zola was invited to Lourdes and shown all the evidence of a miraculous healing.heres one:
“it did not happen.”
talking to an athiest their famous response and only response at some points appear to be, “it did not happen”. some try and refute the relativity of such things as it may not be explained within ‘science’, their idol.
*I like to say that "A cynic is what empties into the sceptic tank."
I have been told that most of Europe was socked in by a massive storm system that day and could not see the sun.Why?
Superficially and from a distance in time it may be said that a very large number of people witnessed an event at a specifed time. It is clear that something happened, but as the effected area was 18-40 kliks at most, it was likely not the “sun” that was the source of the perceptions. The phenomenon was not reported as an event over the whole hemisphere. Many saw the phenomenon, and there is some variation from witnesses topically both disposed and indisposed to faith as to what exactly happened, including, it seems, some who saw nothing at all. . . . ."
Why?
Superficially and from a distance in time it may be said that a very large number of people witnessed an event at a specifed time. It is clear that something happened, but as the affected area was 18-40 kliks at most,
it was likely not the “sun” that was the source of the perceptions. The phenomenon was not reported as an event over the whole hemisphere. Many saw the phenomenon, and there is some variation from witnesses topically both disposed and indisposed to faith as to what exactly happened, including, it seems, some who saw nothing at all.
The mystery of the event, and the the visions associated with it certainly remain a mystery in scientific terms, in particular, I would think, the aspect of prediction. Does this mean it was the historic Mother of Jesus who was the agent in this phenomenon?
Faith is certainly the easiest explanation given the disposition of that population. Yet though that may indeed be the way of it, there may also be another explanation or additional mitigation given some of the circumstances. For the pious, that may not necessarily exclude factors of the event as claimed.
The danger, in my estimation, is to “know” what happened, thus closing the mind to inquiry into what might be a more remarkable explanation than what is commonly offered. And certainly, if one is concerned with matters of faith and salvation, there are matters of more immediate concern than a miracle in another time and place, though those certailny have value in percipitating wonder. That in itself, given the adamantine nature of some cynics and sceptics, may be a miracle.* Yet it is too easily taken for “proof” by the pious, astonishing as a happening as it was.
Just as a side note to all this, there have been, historically, innumerable events of irrational or unexplainable nature. Some of these are chronicled in The Book of the Damned by Charles Fort. Others proliferate in other media venues, some of good repute. These phenomenon can be the subject of a field called “anomalistics,” which is the scientific study of unusual phenomenon and may be where one might go for an atheistc interpretaion of nearly anything of wonder lacking a usual explanation.
It would be important to note here that the mystery aspect of unexplainable phenomena has a value as well as the knowledge aspect, in that wonder is a virtue in keeping the mind susceptible to growth and new experience.
The knowledge aspect may be useful in keeping that growth somewhat grounded in practicality. In all cases it is useful to remember that all of the above is the contents, not the substance, of mind. It is our nature to mistake those two, as we often assume our particualr contents to be equal to reality. That is impossible, save in a reasonably practical way of rudimentary social accounting for experience. As we know from physics, linguistics, epistomology, General Semantics, etc., the common person’s grasp on the actuality of things is highly questionable at best. This is true in particular of various states of awareness and modes of perception, but especially of Consciousness itself.
This seems due to our propensity to interpret from a highly parochial, emotionalized and egocentric position augmented in its turbulence causative ability by ignorance. The chief mitigation of that seems to be self knowledge usually through the difficult path of religion, or the easier one of some other more accurate systems of metaphysical accounting that may yet give religion a meaning beyond rote. In any case, the miracle of the Sun is an event of wonder!
Code:*I like to say that "A cynic is what empties into the sceptic tank."
* Heinlein postulated that the first human civilztion would begin around 2500 CE after a catstrophic global failure of great duration. He was too early in most of his accurate predictions, so this might be an early estimate a well. Mr. Gandhi, who despite seeing many wonderful technical toys observed on a tour of London, remarked on being asked his opinion of Western civilization that "It would be a very good idea." I believe that Heinlein's prediction would dismay him.