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ShynSup
Guest
Good explanationI take “miracle” to mean “direct activity of God on the world (as opposed to mediated by secondary causes).”
Occasionalism is essentially the idea that there are no secondary causes; everything that happens is directly caused by God, and there just seems to be natural causality. It essentially implies that everything is a miracle. Gravitational attraction is not just a natural disposition of all mass-energy in the universe. When a leaf falls to the ground, God is directly moving it. We have the law of universal gravitation because in all instances we have seen, God has in fact been moving things according to the law we’ve generalized.
I am not endorsing occasionalism, but I am pointing out that it is consistent with the way the world is, and since scientific practice works, occasionalism is therefore consistent with scientific practice. (In such a case, we have just misconceived what the “laws of physics” are.*) Since occasionalism is just the case where miracles are universal (everything is directly caused by God), miracles are consistent with scientific practice.
The above is a case where miracles are consistent and predictable. Let us take the other case that they are not consistent and predictable. Suppose, for instance, a team of doctors pronounces someone to be terminally ill. He dies. After several days he comes back to life and there is no evidence of his illness (or even, indeed, that he was dead). The Church pronounces such an event a miracle. (Suppose that it is, in fact, a miracle.)
Scientists, say, go on to investigate the incidence. They cannot replicate the effect in any case. In the end they consign that while the event might have had a natural explanation, but they cannot figure out what it is, and direct evidence is no longer at hand.
It seems to me that such a case is consistent with scientific practice (it does not cause any issues or doubt in our continued application of “laws of physics”) and provides rational (if not completely indefeasible) grounds for believing in miracles. For I do think that we know too much about the way the world works for such an event to occur and for us to say, “We can’t quite rule out a naturalistic explanation.” But I think it is a weak epistemology (that does not properly credit our current knowledge of the natural world) that would suggest that in such a case as I have outlined, we would not have plausible (again, if not indefeasible) grounds for believing that the event was miraculous. We know enough to reasonably suppose that advances in knowledge will not reveal naturalistic explanations for prolonged periods of death followed by revival and complete health. (I don’t claim that everyone who hears of such an event ought to believe it, just that it is implausible to say that it is irrational to believe it.)
I agree that if everything is a miracle, then not all miracles are created equal. But I don’t believe the antecedent (I am just providing the example of occasionalism, which I claim is consistent with our view of the world, in which laws are applied, to show that the occurrence of miracles is not just consistent with application of the laws of physics–but that universality of miracles would be consistent with application of the laws of physics). And I believe the consequent anyway. Not all miracles are created equal. I am not sure how I could predicate equality (or inequality, even) of such a diverse array of events as miracles.
In my opinion, occasionalism is nothing more that a misconception. Laws of physics were created by God. They function on their own.
Animals are ruled by instinct, God is not actually moving them, controlling their feet as a puppet.
Plants grow. God made it so that plants can grow. But he is not adding a new leaf or stretching the trunks.
Same way with photosynthesis. Its a process that just happens and was created by God to work like that, and there is no further intervention.
And the same with every process.