Elok, repeatable experiments are nice, but not always necessary. Observation is the key thing, repeatable observation can just confirm wether a fluke was happening or not.
The thing about god is that there is nothing observable about him. There is no evidence anything like that exists.
"miracles" in no way show that there exists an infinitely powerful supernatural being. *At best* they indicate that there is something going on that we don't current understand, but to jump from that to saying that God exists is pure fantasy.
That said, miracles, when examined, are nothing all that special. Some are fake, some are myth/urban legend, some are just coincidence, and so forth. Occasionally there might be something scientifically interesting going on, but time and time again they are shown to have explanations quite grounded in reality; as with all things.
As with everything though, the key is that evidence must be presented for something to be rationally accepted as true. There is no evidence for god, there is evidence for many other things. Now, unlike what you said, that doesn't mean everything *currently* has an explanation. As Arrian stated, our understanding has grown and so our ability to explain and comprehend what is going on has grown. That doesn't make past irrational or currently irrational religious theories valid; if anything it should make one even more skeptical of them. Of course the sheer lack of evidence and impossibility of evidence should be sufficient to not accept such things as true, but people are not always rational.
-Drachasor
The thing about god is that there is nothing observable about him. There is no evidence anything like that exists.
"miracles" in no way show that there exists an infinitely powerful supernatural being. *At best* they indicate that there is something going on that we don't current understand, but to jump from that to saying that God exists is pure fantasy.
That said, miracles, when examined, are nothing all that special. Some are fake, some are myth/urban legend, some are just coincidence, and so forth. Occasionally there might be something scientifically interesting going on, but time and time again they are shown to have explanations quite grounded in reality; as with all things.
As with everything though, the key is that evidence must be presented for something to be rationally accepted as true. There is no evidence for god, there is evidence for many other things. Now, unlike what you said, that doesn't mean everything *currently* has an explanation. As Arrian stated, our understanding has grown and so our ability to explain and comprehend what is going on has grown. That doesn't make past irrational or currently irrational religious theories valid; if anything it should make one even more skeptical of them. Of course the sheer lack of evidence and impossibility of evidence should be sufficient to not accept such things as true, but people are not always rational.
-Drachasor
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