If eye-witnesses claim something and we cannot immediately explain it, why should we in the first place assume it's supernatural?"Hume's Abject Failure," by John Earman, argues that Hume's arguments against the belief in miracles are mistaken, but even if we grant that Hume's arguments are not convincing why should we believe that supernatural events ever occurred if the only reason for doing so is that there are claims that many eye-witnesses saw the event occur? — Walter Pound
Hume denies that it is rational to believe there are laws of nature, but he also denies that it is rational to believe that there have been events which circumvent the laws of nature. — Janus
The most rational way would seem to be to provisionally accept the veracity of accounts of events which are well-documented and more or less universally accepted as having occurred. — Janus
I had formed the impression, though, that his so-called 'problem of induction' consists in the thought that inductive belief is not rationally driven at all, — Janus
Perhaps the reason might be that those who piously believed the Laws of Nature reflect the Divine Will may have been led to think that the invariances of nature are indeed deductively certain; it would be illogical for God to contravene the Universal Laws He has created. — Janus
The statistics argument for the belief in miracles is refuted by this mathematician here. — Walter Pound
The burden of proof is always on the person making claim x. Since christians and muslims try to convert skeptics, they carry the burden of proof of proving their respective beliefs. — Walter Pound
,even if we grant that Hume's arguments are not convincing why should we believe that supernatural events ever occurred if the only reason for doing so is that there are claims that many eye-witnesses saw the event occur? — Walter Pound
I didn't assume there were eye-witnesses, you said there were eye-witnesses. You were wondering about eye-witness miracle testimonies, so I wrote about eye-witness miracle testimonies. I guess if you told me about a miracle you performed that had no witnesses, I wouldn't believe you since there weren't reliable, independent witness accounts to update/increase the probability of it having happened.Finally, you syllogism assumes that there are indeed witnesses for a miracle, but why even take for granted the claim that there were witnesses to a miracle? — Walter Pound
Nope, I said that there is a claim that miracle x occurred while many eye-witnesses were present. Never did I say that miracle x occurred and many eye-witnesses saw the miracle.I didn't assume there were eye-witnesses, you said there were eye-witnesses. — Empedocles
Do you have anything to say in defense of your argument I laid out against eye-witness testimony? Or are we agreed that eye-witness testimony can be a decent source of knowledge — Empedocles
Nope, I said that there is a claim that miracle x occurred while many eye-witnesses were present. Never did I say that miracle x occurred and many eye-witnesses saw the miracle. — Walter Pound
Right, I never said it's better than physical evidence, I was just saying it's a decent source of knowledge. And if we accept it as a source of knowledge in lots of other areas, why not for miracles?Eye-witness testimony is not as good as physical evidence — Walter Pound
Finally, the statistic video seemed self-explanatory, but can you tell me which part confused you? — Walter Pound
And if we accept it as a source of knowledge in lots of other areas, why not for miracles? — Empedocles
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