Thousands of people witnessed an extraordinary event at Fatima which has no scientific explanation.
I didn’t ask for an explanation of what was reported. I asked if you believe it.
"First, the existence of “God of the gaps” explanations in the past no more undermines current arguments for God than discarded scientific theories and medical beliefs of the past undermine today’s science and medicine. The mistakes in each should only drive us to more careful theorizing in the future.
Misrepresentation. Or the people who wrote that do not understand what the concept of God of the Gaps means. It isn’t a method used to ‘undermine current arguments for God’. It’s simply a way of pointing out that what people thought (past tense) was supernatural turned out to be not the case. It’s another way of saying that if you keep on using God as a place marker when we don’t currently have sufficient knowledge to give a natural answer, then past experience says you are asking for trouble.
In other words, don’t put God in a box.
That’s an example which I cited earlier–some things which are gaga, lala nonsense that even uneducated peasants know to be absurd will be embraced by the most educated intellectuals.
Zeitoun being a good example. But as someone said: ‘Some arguments are ridiculous on their own merit’ and don’t need to be investigated. Is that why the Vatican didn’t investigate this? It’s ridiculous?
So Hindu beliefs are correct.
“If science is the only basis for all knowledge, then science must investigate all claims.”
Only up to the point where it can be reasonably expected that further investigation will give the same result. In this case we are talking about receiving messages from a long dead person. The possibility of this has been investigated well past the point where it can be safely said, from a scientific viewpoint, that it doesn’t happen. End of story.
Now unless something extraordinary happens that would require additional investigation, things that go bump in the night, radios that start working by themselves, the discovery of long lost jewellery, Ouija boards, tarot cards etc etc and gazillions of other nondescript events that people would like to believe are supernatural can be discounted without having to investigate every single event.
This is what I meant earlier when I said that Shermer doesn’t believe in the Supernatural. All previous investigations (and I really mean all – every single one) has shown that there is no evidence for it. And although I’m pretty sure that no-one has investigated all specific claims of anyone whose radio or clock started unexpectedly, that is not, in itself, what is required. The investigation would be: ‘Is this (yet another) case of a message from a dead person’. And as I said, the jury, as far as this matter is concerned, has delivered its verdict.
And a verdict that now requires anyone who believes it can happen to have to prove that the inductive reasoning that science has reached in this regard is wrong. Otherwise, you would say that after you have fully investigated the Ouija board message at this house, you move across town to investigate the next one. And then the next. And maybe back to the first because they had a different message. That’s not what science does.