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Of course science cannot a priori (or, indeed, a posteriori) exclude supernatural miraculous events.
Having admitted that there is no answer to transubstantiation other than to deny God and His omnipotence, the only reasonable conclusion is the “visible consequences of a divine intervention which in itself would remain invisible, e.g., in the assumption of a human nature by a divine Person or in the transubstantiation of the Eucharist.” (Msgr John F McCarthy at
rtforum.org/lt/lt80.html )
“Philosophy is that field of certified knowledge “that seeks and studies first principles of all things” (Rizzi)
I fail to see how this is relevant at all to what we are talking about.
If first principles of all things are not relevant to this thread then the moon is made of green cheese. Belief or non-belief hinges on first principles. Science consists of an organized effort to explain natural phenomena. Why did this effort take root in Europe and nowhere else? Because Christianity depicted God as a rational, responsive, dependable, and omnipotent being, and the universe as his personal creation. The natural world was thus understood to have a rational, lawful, stable structure, awaiting (indeed, inviting) human comprehension.
Even Friedrich Nietzsche (‘God is dead’) wrote: “Strictly speaking there is no such thing as science ‘without any presuppositions’… a philosophy, a ‘faith’, must always be there first, so that science can acquire a direction, a meaning, a limit, a method, a right to exist… It is still a metaphysical faith that underlines our faith in science.” (
Genealogy of Morals III, 23-24).
For the last fifty years, virtually all historians of science – including A.C. Crombie, David Lindberg, Edward Grant, Stanley Jaki, Thomas Goldstein, and J.L. Heilbron – have concluded that the Scientific Revolution was indebted to the Church.” (
How The Catholic Church Built Western Civilization, Thomas E Woods Jr., Regnery Publishing, 2005, p 4).
Science includes historical science, philosophical science, and theological science, based on realist metaphysics and which is thoroughly aware of its own scientific medium of thought.