Wow… largely away from the keyboard for a few days, and this thread has really been rolling along!
The actual event is not in question. The explanation is where the problem occurs. We are faced with the so-called boundary problem. The event occurred in the physical realm, the cause in the non-physical one.
So this only means that the request for ‘evidence’ isn’t a request in good faith, right? If we know that the meat of the request is “prove it to me”, and the realm in which that proof must exist is non-physical, then the request is really just an attempt to bait the respondent, isn’t it?
Let’s look at a specific example, the transubstantiation. The starting piece is the bread, and the wine. The ending piece is the actual body and blood of Jesus (which part?). Both are in this physical realm, but all the evidence shows that they are just bread and wine. So the claim of “miracle” is not born out by the evidence.
The claim isn’t that we’d be able to ‘prove’ anything from the physical elements of the Eucharist. Maybe that’s the source of the disconnect. Moreover, the argument for transubstantiation is a
philosophical argument, not an
empirical one, so there’s nothing to ‘prove’ there, either.
(Incidentally, the argument is that the Eucharist is the
substance of Christ (and therefore, does not consist of ‘parts’), and that the physical appearances remain the same. Therefore, we expect that there is no change to anything that can be measured physically – the physical appearances don’t change, but metaphysically, the ‘what’ of it changes.)
The same kind of problem occurs with the so-called paranormal claims. There is really NO difference between the paranormal claims and the supernatural claims.
On the surface of it? Almost correct. In one sense, both are making claims that are not proven empirically.
However, there
is one huge difference: the claims of the paranormal assert that these things are empirically measurable, so when they are not measured or sufficiently proven, we would say that their claims don’t hold up. That’s a critical difference between the two types of claims.
I never said that. I explicitly deny the claim that only empirical methods can lead to truth statements.
Fair enough. That’s how it plays out, often, in these engagements between believers and non-believers, though…
Well, we can try the angels, if you want. There are “guardian angels”, according to the mythology. They are supposed to be “guarding” us… and yet, there is no evidence.
Again, what physical evidence of a spiritual reality are you looking for?
Yes, and no.

Both we, adults and God are supposed to be rational beings, while children and the mentally impaired are not. If a child does not comprehend, we can “downsize” the explanation to their level.
We
can; but that does not mean that we are required to. We’re still at loggerheads: non-believers make the claim that God
must do so… but fail to be responsive when asked “why?”
God could do that, but does not. If a parent does not even acknowledge the child’s request, then the child can reasonably assume that the parent does not care.
No, I don’t think that’s reasonable. Of course, the child might reach that conclusion… but it’s not a reasonable one. In fact, when a child makes that complaint, he appears merely petulant.
Sure there is a good rationale. Just look at the millions and billions of intercessory prayers (not the meditative ones) where the person asks for something tangible, and out of the ordinary. What percentage of those supplications is “fulfilled” in a positive fashion?
Yes, there are those Christians out there who treat prayer as if it’s a slot machine. It’s not. In Catholic theology, the reason for prayer isn’t “I get what I want”, but rather “I get closer to understanding God’s will for me.” That’s a difficult thing to hear, but it’s what we believe.
Ok. That is where a conversation could be interesting. You are more than welcome to offer a process. The only requirement is that it should be objective. But remember, if it happens in our realm, it is subject to the verification process.
And that’s where these discussions tend to fizzle out. We discuss the reasons
why such processes cannot achieve what non-believers wish them to achieve, and then the non-believer in the discussion shrugs and says, “well, offer me a process and we can talk.” After agreeing that there is no epistemology for empirically proving non-physical claims.
