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Miracles%20

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Title: Miracles%20


1
Miracles Do They Exist?
  • Humes Skeptical Challenge

2
Which if any - of these are miracles?
  • Someone who has been pronounced dead comes back
    to life.
  • A person correctly predicts a future earthquake.
  • A large tiger suddenly disappears from a cage in
    front of a large audience.
  • Water is changed into wine.

3
Brief Review of Empiricist Epistemology
  • Empiricism is the view that all claims to
    knowledge must be based on
  • sense experience (evidence or matters of fact
  • truths of reason (conceptual relations or
    relations of ideas)
  • Knowledge developed from these bases must follow
    all the rules of careful reasoning.

4
Empiricism and belief-formation
  • Because the strength of evidence can vary, wise
    men will proportion their beliefs to the
    evidence.
  • Frank brought flowers home to his wife. He must
    be having an affair.
  • Franks credit card bills show charges for a
    local motel, and he has been spotted leaving the
    hotel once with Joan.
  • Frank was caught having sex with Joan multiple
    times.

5
Empiricist Principles
  • Beliefs should only be as strong as the evidence
    supporting them.
  • Claims with prima facia implausibility should not
    be accepted without strongly supportive evidence
    and argument.
  • The authority of witnesses derives from witness
    reliability and conformity with other facts and
    other witnesses

6
Empiricism and Miracles
  • Definition A miracle is a violation of a law of
    nature. p. 513. Thus
  • the argument against miracles from the start
    is as powerful and compelling as natural law
    itself.
  • only equally powerful and compelling
    argument/evidence can override this presumption
    of falsity.

7
Humes Basic Position
  • no testimony is sufficient to establish a
    miracle, unless the testimony be of such a kind,
    that its falsehood would be more miraculous, than
    the fact, which it endeavours to establish p.
    513

In other words the miraculous claim should be
so obviously true that the conditions under which
we would question it are not apparent.
8
Argument for Skepticism - 1
  • No miracle is affirmed by enough of the right
    kind of witness, to dispel our doubt of their
    testimony. p. 514
  • No self-delusion
  • Complete integrity/reliability
  • Possessing a good reputation they would not want
    to lose
  • Attesting to facts that are/were widely public
    and known

9
Argument for Skepticism - 2
  • Certain human emotions tend to override our
    normal skeptical tendencies with respect to that
    which is called miraculous.
  • Our thinking is naturally and usefully
    conservative we tend to give credit to
    thinking/observations supported by past
    experience.
  • In contrast, our fascination and wonder at the
    unusual and exotic tend us to believe in the
    apparently miraculous.

10
Argument for Skepticism - 2
  • People respond as much to eloquence as to
    evidence and reasoning.
  • There are many instances of forged miracles or
    supernatural events.

11
Argument for Skepticism 3 4
  • Testaments to miracles tend to occur more
    frequently in ignorant and barbarous nations,
    or as handed down from such primitive origins.
  • Every miracle confirming the beliefs of one
    religion counts, eo ipso, against those of every
    other religion, in a mutually destructive
    pattern. p. 515

12
Miracles Definitions Revisited
  • Swinburne and the Philosophical Issues Connected
    to Miracles

13
A New Definition of Miracle
  • An event of an extraordinary kind but what
    counts as extraordinary?
  • An event caused by a God or perhaps by any
    rational agent with unusual powers?
  • An event of religious significance but what
    counts as religiously significant?

14
Extraordinary Events
  • These are events that do conflict with natural
    law, in the strong sense, as Hume argued.
  • A miracle is a non-repeatable counter-instance
    of a law of nature (it would not happen again
    under similar instances), no matter how laws of
    nature are interpreted.

15
Natural Law - 1
  • Universal laws those which state what must
    happen.
  • Example All material objects are subject to the
    law of gravity.

Universal laws by definition do not allow for
natural exceptions or extraordinary but still
actual events.
16
Natural Law - 2
  • Statistical laws those which state what is
    likely to happen in a particular population of
    things or events
  • Example in a large sample of coin tosses, half
    will result in heads and half in tails

Statistical laws allow for individually
unpredictable or highly improbable, but still
actually possible events.
17
How Can the Extraordinary Happen?
  • All natural laws apply, only given certain
    initial conditions.

Its not the case that all objects fall. It is
the case that, given an objects being in a
certain state under certain conditions, it will
fall.
A miracle could be the result of extraordinary
initial conditions which still follow natural law
given those conditions.
18
Gods Hand in Miracles
  • Unusual events are not miraculous, in the
    common-sense understanding of the term.

Correctly predicting an event in the future is
unusual but not necessarily miraculous, in the
sense that the prediction could have been correct
for purely natural or coincidental reasons.
Miracles, then, are also considered the work of a
unique power be it God, or gods or even some
rational agent acting intentionally
19
Religious Significance
  • an event must contribute significantly toward
    a holy divine purpose for the world. p. 520

Unusual, and purposive but this could be the
activity of a malevolent being. To retain the
common-sense understanding of a miracle,
Swinburne adds this condition.
20
Summary of Swinburnes Definition of Miracle
  • Statistical natural laws may allow of
    extraordinary but not miraculous events
  • Universal natural laws are consistent with
    non-repeatable counter-instances
  • Miracles - or
  • Demonstrations of the limits of our current
    understanding of natural law

21
Response to Hume
  • Are there sufficient numbers of witnesses whose
    testimony does agree?
  • Is there historical but non-testamentary forms of
    evidence (confirmation of prophecy)?
  • Miracles arent necessarily offered as proof of
    specific theological doctrines (answers to
    prayers, v. resurrection of Christ)
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