P
polytropos
Guest
This is not what I am talking about. The abstracted laws of nature are still the laws of natures. They do still generalize how substances with given natures interact. The point is not that cause and effect are decoupled; the point is that laws of natures are descriptions of certain causes, while a miracle is accountable to God.Hume would agree; there is no inherent logical necessity that there will be a sunrise tomorrow, just because there was a sunrise from time immemorial.
Likewise, according to that way of thinking, there is no inherent logical necessity that a human being is mortal. It’s simply that a human being, in fact, has proven to be mortal in all known cases thus far. Nor is there inherent logical necessity that sexual reproduction is necessary to produce offspring… Gee, this could be dangerous in rationalizing exceptions to assumed norms of human conduct(“it’s against nature to co-habit with those of one’s sex; two men or two women cannot make a baby!”; “yes, but – strictly speaking – you cannot tell me that two men cannot make a baby, merely that no baby has resulted thus far”). Anything is possible, in principle; just some things have never been observed thus far. Before Mary conceived, individuals would have insisted that a woman cannot make a baby without a husband or man in the picture.
I also would dispute that consistent conceivability (ie. not inherently logically impossible) implies real possibility. There are “natural necessities” that we don’t know about but can’t be violated. For instance, if a few thousand years ago, you said, “A ruby could be made of diamond,” the proposition would have been empty and vacuous. Even though, a few thousand years ago, we did not know that rubies are made of red corundum, they were, and it was necessary to what they were. So even though, at the time, it seems logically consistent to say that they could, conceivably, be made of diamond, it was false, and any statement claiming as much was meaningless. (Likewise, Hume’s claim that an object might exist without a cause because it is “imaginable” is vacuous.)
I am not saying, then, that there is no legitimate way to appeal to the laws of nature. I am saying that they do not exist on their own, and are actually generalizations consequent on the activity of repeatable but individual forms (like “human being,” or “ruby”). “Anything is possible, in principle” does not follow; that two men could have a baby is, I would say, something we could judge as false given human nature.