Z
Ziggamafu
Guest
Hello all,
Would anyone be able to offer some advice on the following challenge to belief in miracles? Most of you have probably heard of the atheistic “mighty mouse” approach:
How many testimonies of seeing a mouse lift a battleship into the air would you have to listen to before you believed it happened?
The obvious point being that a rational person would never believe it (erroneous because that precludes the possibility of an any unknown or extraordinary phenomenon at all).
Here is the twist:
*
Suppose you substantiated the claims, or you actually witnessed the mouse lift the battleship into the air. Granting that it is therefore reasonable to accept as a historic fact that people perceived the event, isn’t it more logical to then conceive of any natural explanation that is at least hypothetically plausible before accepting that what you perceived was actually as you perceived it (supernatural)?
*
This changes things slightly. For instance the idea would apply to an atheist granting that people did in fact perceive a resurrected Christ, but maintaining that it is nevertheless unreasonable to believe that their perception matched up to actuality rather than accepting a natural explanation that is hypothetically plausible, even if unlikely. An example would be that Christ had a twin who participated in a great magic trick for the sake of selflessly promulgating a reformed vision of Judaism. You get the idea; the atheist insists that a natural explanation must always be preferred to a supernatural explanation unless every hypothetically plausible natural explanation has been ruled out.
In other words, how do we respond to the atheist that allows for the hypothetical possibility of miracles, as well as for the credibility of testimonies to perceptions of miraculous events, but points to the improbability of the supernatural explanation opposed to the natural explanation?
Thanks for any help.
Would anyone be able to offer some advice on the following challenge to belief in miracles? Most of you have probably heard of the atheistic “mighty mouse” approach:
How many testimonies of seeing a mouse lift a battleship into the air would you have to listen to before you believed it happened?
The obvious point being that a rational person would never believe it (erroneous because that precludes the possibility of an any unknown or extraordinary phenomenon at all).
Here is the twist:
*
Suppose you substantiated the claims, or you actually witnessed the mouse lift the battleship into the air. Granting that it is therefore reasonable to accept as a historic fact that people perceived the event, isn’t it more logical to then conceive of any natural explanation that is at least hypothetically plausible before accepting that what you perceived was actually as you perceived it (supernatural)?
*
This changes things slightly. For instance the idea would apply to an atheist granting that people did in fact perceive a resurrected Christ, but maintaining that it is nevertheless unreasonable to believe that their perception matched up to actuality rather than accepting a natural explanation that is hypothetically plausible, even if unlikely. An example would be that Christ had a twin who participated in a great magic trick for the sake of selflessly promulgating a reformed vision of Judaism. You get the idea; the atheist insists that a natural explanation must always be preferred to a supernatural explanation unless every hypothetically plausible natural explanation has been ruled out.
In other words, how do we respond to the atheist that allows for the hypothetical possibility of miracles, as well as for the credibility of testimonies to perceptions of miraculous events, but points to the improbability of the supernatural explanation opposed to the natural explanation?
Thanks for any help.