Not true at all. St. Paul teaches us that the law of nature is death. Those who are slaves to that law will die in their sins. We are called to a supernatural life – which lifts us above mere nature. Nature brings us to sin - no man can avoid it. Through supernatural grace, we are forgiven and can live a supernatural life in union with Christ.
Reggie, you are using a completely different sense (meaning) of “law of nature” than I am. The way I’m using it, as scientifically-recognized laws and processes of nature, is very clear from the context in which I use it. Please stop taking my words out of context.
You want to use “law of nature” in a spiritual sense as St. Paul does. I’m not talking about that.
I’m talking about things like gravity, energy, thermodynamics, optics; things defined by disciplines such as organic chemistry, genetics, ecology, meteorology. Do you deny that humans are subject to those things in the physical world? Yes or no, please, then explain as you wish.
You’re skipping over the miraculous, but that’s not the point.
WHAT? I have explicitly several times mentioned miracles? Read my posts more carefully or don’t bother responding!
Even if they just made a free decision to go because they wanted to see what was there – it was not a materialistic cause.
Where are you getting this stuff? The cause of the decision didn’t need to be materialistic. I have never claimed that, nor does science claim that humans make decisions based solely on materialistic causes. I’m not debating the cause of the choice; that has nothing to do with the areas of evolution we’re talking about; it has nothing to do with whether humans are subject to natural forces or not.
After choice comes consequence. The Hebrews endured physical consequences from their environments, and affected their environments in physical ways. Those physical effects operate within normal natural processes except where suspended explicitly by miracles.
You seem to want to debate this. You’ve accepted that immaterial forces are empiricially observable and have an influence on human life. Now you’re trying to minimize the influence, even though you cannot provide scientific evidence of it.
We know by faith that “immaterial forces” affect humans in many ways spiritually. We know by faith that much of our awareness and experience resides in the soul. We know by science that some of these properties of humans are not explainable by physical means. But science can observe how a choice interacts with physical nature, and has incorporated such things in all its theories, including evolution (via environmental factors/impacts). So what I’m saying is that I see no evidence that human choices have affected nature in ways that would break or defy scientific theories like evolution. What evidence do you have that they do?
No scientific theory takes into consideration that the Hebrew people changed their environment due to an immaterial cause. What impact did that have? Was that the only influence that divine power had on those people?
Science doesn’t need to. The Hebrews impacted their environment in ways typical of other human migrations. They didn’t violate all the laws and processes of nature. Just how do you think they “broke” evolutionary functions of adaptation among the flora and fauna they encountered? How did they destroy ecological processes?
If they did neither, then why don’t you agree with me that they didn’t operate outside the theory of evolution one bit?
(Keep in mind, we’re not talking about evolutionary psychology or other psuedo-science philosophies here–I long ago disavowed those; we’re only talking about biological evolutionary forces).