Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Miracles: Science, reason and morality
- The Moral Dimension
- Maurice Wiles - It seems strange that no miraculous intervention prevented Auschwitz or Hiroshima. The
purposes apparently forwarded for some of the miracles acclaimed in the Christian tradition seem trivial by
comparison
- Peter Vardy - A god who intervenes at Lourdes to cure
an old man of cancer but does not act to save starving
millions in Ethiopia, such a God needs, at least, to face
some hard moral questioning
- That which can not be
categorised in a
scientific manner is
considered to be untrue
and false
- The laws of nature are considered to be reliable and
unchanging and reports of miracles seem to deny this
understanding of how that world worked
- Reaction against
miracles with
claims that they
went against
science and
reason
- Peter Atkins -
Everything in the
universe can be
explained in terms
of physical science
- Offers a mechanistic view of the
universe: it runs according to
scientific principles and natural law
and these can be established and
determined by empirical investigation
- There are some miracles which
can not be explained by science
or medicine - Lourdes healing
miracles
- Religious believers
say that it is God, not
science, that
provides the ultimate
explanation
- Keith Ward - God is the end of the
quest for intelligibility, a rational
complete explanation for events
that are otherwise inexplicable