I realize that you do not accept that genuine miracles occur.
Yes, I think it requires an astonishing degree of credulity to believe in miraculous healing. However, as I have said, it is somewhat peripheral to the topic, so we will have to agree to differ. However, I will say a bit more below in response to your assertions.
The standard recourse that somehow future scientific advances will explain the data again confronts our metaphysical differences, since I would contend that instant creation of healthy tissue where pure pathology previously existed exceeds the power of unaided nature.
There are two issues with this - first to show that the events as described actually happened: in other words you have to show that it is more reasonable to accept that instant transformation from pathological to healthy tissue actually happened than to accept that there was a misdiagnosis, or poor pathology, or a psychologically mediated effect. Even if we accept that this instant transformation took place, you are unwarranted in your confidence that the event “exceeds the power of unaided nature”. Such a fallacy once applied to telephony, computers and heavier than air flight.
Creation for Catholic philosophers does not mean simply “non-existence” followed temporally by “existence,” but rather the total and absolute dependence of any finite being upon the Infinite Being. Since you also reject the metaphysical first principles as universally valid it is small wonder that you also reject the proofs for God’s existence upon which they depend.
I grant you all of that.
Since you seem so concerned about the “intractable problems” associated with God working miracles, let me address this briefly. Of course, I am aware of the various arguments against the possibility of miracles, but it serves little purpose here to swat each away in turn like a swarm of flies.
The fact is that they are not a swarm of flies but theological defeaters.
God does not “change His mind,” nor is He unjust.
That is precisely the issue with intercessory prayers and miracles. If God is willing to intervene in the normal operation of the universe in the case of a supplicant at Lourdes, then where was he at Belsen? Such a God cannot be described as just in any reasonable understanding of the term - if the term “just” means anything at all, then it cannot be reasonably applied to such a God.
As the Alpha and the Omega, from all eternity He is unchangably willing that all creation exists as it does, including those moments in which He suspends natural law and intervenes in a special manner to raise the dead or heal the sick, etc., for reasons of His own.
But the Catholic conception of God is that he is just and that the notion of justice should extend to his reasons. We might not know what His reasons are, but we know , according to Catholic theology, that they must be just. But a God who heals the occasional supplicant at Lourdes but ignores Belsen is not just in any reasonable understanding of the concept.
He is no more unjust to heal this person than that one than is He so to allow one to be run over by a car and not another.
This is a poor analogy, for in the one case, all that is required is that the universe roll on according to the laws of nature, and in the other, miraculous case, what is required is that God actively intervenes to help one person, while millions of others die in the most appalling circumstances. The defence that free will entails non-intervention by God cannot apply here.
What this objection really addresses is the problem of evil, not miracles, something totally outside this thread’s topic.
No, the objection addresses the problem of lack of justice in miracles, separate from the problem of evil (which is also a real and quite intractable problem for theists, but admittedly outside the topic of the thread). In claiming that Catholic philosophers do not wrestle with these difficulties, is to attempt to sweep real problems under the carpet.
When you assume that the natural philosophical species concept is an “invention” of my own, you reveal that you do not know key elements in the history of philosophy, especially in St. Thomas Aquinas.
We were talking about concepts for defining species of living organisms. Amongst the many species concepts that have been proposed, there is no such thing as a natural philosophical species concept (and as I pointed out before, essentialist notions of species of organisms have been completely falsified). You still haven’t clarified the point that you were trying to make when you referred to Mayr, formulator of the biological species concept.
That is the basis of much of our disagreement in this thread, since you dismiss the entire Catholic philosophical tradition as being “outdated and outmoded,” replaced presumably by the findings of modern science. If this is not the essence of a modernistic positivistic approach to religion and values, I know not what is.
Of course, I dismiss it, for good reason, but how does this observation advance your case in any way?
You still insist, “The observation that our sensory (name removed by moderator)ut and information processing produce beliefs that correspond to reality, and that that reality is consistent in time and place, is the only required epistemic basis for doing science.” But this “epistemic basis” entails a lot. We cover old ground here. Conventional philosophers (not just Thomists) have long referred to the “epistemological naivete” of positivism.
I never said I was a positivist, nor can you reasonably infer that I am one. I dislike labels, but if you need one, I am closest to a pragmatic verificationist.
You can defend epistemological realism, but NOT within natural science itself, since, precisely, that would be to assume what you try to prove, namely, that the mind conforms to external reality.
But I no more need to “prove that the mind conforms to external reality” in order to do science than I need to effect this proof to safely cross the road. Short of solipsism, it is self-evident that beliefs that arise from our sensory perception and our information processing conform to reality - existence would be impossible otherwise. It is a pragmatic fact that, in the absence of pathologies in our sensory organs and our cognition, the busy road can be safely crossed, and science works. No metaphyics is required - science is validated by its performance not by its axioms.
To be continued