I can understand why people believe the kind of miracles described in Judaism, Christianity or Islam for that matter. They are clearly portrayed as one-off events, that are, for the most part, not reproducible, nor in the control of human beings (for the most part). — Agustino
But there are smart people, for example Steve Jobs, who did a similar thing by refusing surgery for cancer, and ended up dying. So where do we draw the boundary between miracles and fantasy, and why is it that some intelligent and very pragmatic people believe fantasy? — Agustino
So materializing a palace in the middle of the Himalayas is just "coincidence"? :PDon't you mean, why do some "highly intelligent folk" believe in miracles rather than coincidence? — apokrisis
Thanks for the book, haven't read it. However, I should note that I have no doubt that the mind influences the physical health of the body, and can even cure the body in some cases. However, the problem is with refusing conventional medicine which has been shown in once circumstance to have good outcomes in order to attempt to heal solely through the mind.You should read Cure, Agustino. It shows some science behind the "miracles". — praxis
:-d - obviously I mean an interruption of the laws of physics.And I think that your definition sucks, by the way. It's too vague and inclusive. Is a power cut a miracle? Is constipation? — Sapientia
You should read Cure, — praxis
Over hundreds of hours in the Vatican archives, I examined the files of more than 1,400 miracle investigations — at least one from every canonization between 1588 and 1999.
So materializing a palace in the middle of the Himalayas is just "coincidence"? — Agustino
I think it was fantasy, but there are obviously some people who claim that it did happen.Did that happen or didn’t you say it was a fantasy? — apokrisis
That is a more difficult and different than the questions I was asking in the OP. It depends on the context. If I say - "now I will walk on water" and then walk on water it will be different than if I just try to go into the water and happen to walk on it for a second or so.Then intelligent folk would have to decide whether to attribute them to divine intervention or mere coincidence.
Where ought we draw the line would you say? — apokrisis
Well, personally I rely on their very rare occurence, not their entire non-occurrence.on the non-occurrence of such anomalous happenings. — Wayfarer
If we have the miracles become frequent, day-to-day things, then certainly. Would you not say that having everyday miracles would undermine the sense of certainty we get from our scientific understanding?The fact of scientific regularity and predictability provides a kind of handle on what to consider reasonable; talk of miracles undermines that sense of certainty. — Wayfarer
Thanks, interesting. I knew he liked the book and read it, but I didn't know he gave a copy at his funeral. But that even proves my point even more. I think he was influenced by such reading, which caused him to take a decision that ended in his death. He could very likely have saved himself had he listened to his doctors. So it seems strange that he was such a pragmatic person in business - obviously not some wishy-washy type who lived in a dream world and couldn't get things done - and yet, when it came to his physical health, he adopted such a wishy-washy approach instead of relying on the certainty of medical science.You didn’t mention this, but a copy of Autobiography of a Yogi was given to every guest at Steve Jobs’ funeral 1. — Wayfarer
The strange part about this is that you'd expect someone who is pragmatic in one area of his life to be able to take this same pragmatism and apply it to other areas, but apparently not in this case. I think he overestimated his own powers.Jobs named his company ‘Apple’ partially because at the time he was a fruitarian. It is true that he postponed treatement very unwisely — Wayfarer
Hmm, that's interesting but isn't Eastern mysticism quite frequently against "making a dent in the Universe" - I mean it's not like Buddhism or Hinduism love ambition as an attitude no?Actually I once considered doing some research on the influence of popular Eastern mysticism on the birth of the computer revolution. A lot of the creators of the PC and software, in the Bay Area, were into that kind of thing. It made it possible for them to think they could, as Jobs used to say, ‘make a dent in the Universe’. — Wayfarer
That's why John D. Rockefeller or King Solomon were the wealthiest men who ever lived? — Agustino
For example, if there was a surgery with 90% chance of success that could cure you of a serious disease, would you refuse the surgery and attempt to cure yourself through the mind alone? — Agustino
Obviously I mean an interruption of the laws of physics. — Agustino
For example, if there was a surgery with 90% chance of success that could cure you of a serious disease, would you refuse the surgery and attempt to cure yourself through the mind alone? — Agustino
A miracle is an occurrence that cannot be explained by any of the sciences and therefore cannot happen. — Joel Bingham
This is where theism came from because of the lack of scientific development in the ancient world as people saw something cool and assigned it to a god because humans have always had the desire to understand everything but haven't had the resources or were not developed enough to do so — Joel Bingham
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.