I’m not the atheist who is making any claims.
That’s why I used the third person in my post
I think it can be agreed that ‘natural’ is the normal state of affairs. And ‘supernatural’ would be when the normal state of affairs exhibits conditions that are not natural.
I agree that this is a good rule of thumb, but it isn’t essential to nature to be normal: for example, in natural selection and genetics, a mutation that turns out to be beneficial to an organism is very rare.
I just want to know how we can tell when this happens. There must be something observable that so eone can point to and say: ‘Look…something has happened that is not natural. Something has happened that is supernatural’.
If that is the case, then we have something which we can examine. We would have what someone would describe as evidence of the supernatural.
I think the cause of the problem that Mort is pointing out, is that modern people in general, and of course naturalists in particular, don’t have an understanding or concept of
nature. What is nature?
If water parted on the Red sea, the naturalist might want to say that there is an unknown aspect of the nature of water, or the wind, or the interaction between the two, that caused the event. With an actual understanding, a concept, of the nature of water and wind, especially at a very specific and meaningful time of occurrence, we can conclude that such an event is not natural, but above such.
The Christian see the dead rise, and falls to his knees, while a non-believer sees the dead rise, a propose, without evidence, that the dead weren’t really dead, or that there is a natural cause not discovered that caused the event, or some other excuse not to believe.
In other words, just like most things (except maybe basic logic and mathematics), if one has a motivation to deny it, he’ll come up with a theory to excuse himself from it.
The point that has been made is that any such evidence has found to be far from anywhere near convincing.
I disagree. Once you did your mind of the influences of philosophical naturalism, it is pretty easy to see the strong evidence for the existence of miracles throughout history.
Christi pax.