This article, which appeared in Sunday's Chicago Sun-Times, is adapted from my new book What's So Great About Christianity.
Are miracles possible in an age of science? A host of bestselling atheist books, from Sam Harris' The End of Faith to Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion to Christopher Hitchens' God Is Not Great, all sneer at the notion of miracles. Dawkins,for instance, writes that miracles are "flatly contradictory not just to the facts of science but also to the spirit of science." Reasonable people in his view "have to renounce miracles."
Some Christians are so intimidated by the authority of science that they do their best to explain away the miracles reported in the Bible. How did Jesus feed thousands of people with a few loaves and fishes? Perhaps he had a secret store of food, or people brought their own packed lunches. How did Jesus walk on water? Maybe there was a platform floating beneath the surface. How did Jesus raise Lazarus from the dead? Lazarus might simply have been in a trance. These explanations have actually been suggested by theologians.
In getting rid of miracles, these people are getting rid of Christianity. Some religions, such as Islam, do not rely on miracles. Others, such as Judaism, report miracles but are not dependent on them. Christianity, however, is based on miracles, from the virgin birth to the resurrection. Without the resurrection, Paul writes in his first letter to the Corinthians, "our preaching is useless and so is your faith."
I intend to show that miracles are possible by refuting the strongest argument against them, that of the philosopher David Hume. Hume'sargument is widely cited by atheists; Dawkins and Hitchens both invokeit to justify their wholesale rejection of miracles. I am not trying to defend the veracity of any particular miracle. And of course miracles are improbable-that's why we use the term "miracle." I will, however, show that the possibility of miracles is completely consistent with modern science and modern knowledge.
In his Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding,Hume argued: 1) A miracle is a violation of the known laws of nature,2) We know these laws through repeated and constant experience, 3) Thetestimony of those who report miracles contradicts the operation ofknown scientific laws, 4) Consequently no one can rationally believe inmiracles. My refutation will show that: 1) Amiracle is a violation of the known laws of nature, 2) Scientific lawsare on Hume's own account empirically unverifiable, 3) Thus violationsof the known laws of nature are quite possible, 4) Therefore, miraclesare possible.
Why are scientific laws unverifiable? Hume'sanswer was that no finite number of observations, however large, can beused to derive an unrestricted general conclusion that is logicallydefensible. If I say all swans are white and posit that as a scientific hypothesis, how would I go about verifying it? By checking out swans. A million swans. Or ten million. Based on this I can say confidently that all swans are white. Hume's point is that I don't really know this. Tomorrow I might see a black swan, and there goes my scientific law.
This is not a frivolous example. For thousands of years before was discovered, the only swans people in the West had seen had been white. Consequently,the entire Western world took it for granted that all swans were white,and expressions like "white as a swan" abound in Western literature. It was only when Europeans landed in that they saw, for the first time, a black swan. What was previously considered a scientifically inviolable truth had to be retired.
Atthis point one might expect today's champions of science to startpatting themselves on the back and saying, "Yes, and this is thewonderful thing about science. It is always open to correction and revision. It learns from its mistakes." Theatheist philosopher Daniel Dennett writes, "The methods of sciencearen't foolproof, but they are indefinitely perfectible....There is atradition of criticism that enforces improvement whenever and whereverflaws are discovered."
Tosay this is to miss the force of Hume's reasoning, which is thatscience was not justified in positing these rules in the first place. All scientific laws are empirically unverifiable. How do we know that light travels at the speed of 186,000 miles per second? We measure it. Butjust because we measure it at that speed one time, or ten times, or abillion times, doesn't mean that light always and everywhere travels atthat speed. We are simply assuming this, but we don't know it to be so. Tomorrow we might find a situation in which light travels at a different speed, and then we will be reminded of black swans.
But can't scientific laws be derived from the logical connection between cause and effect? No, Hume argued, because there is no logical connection between cause and effect. We may see event A and then event B, and we may assume that event A caused event B, but we cannot know this for sure. All we have observed is a correlation, and no number of observed correlations can add up to a necessary connection.
Consider a simple illustration. A child drops a ball on the ground for the first time. To his surprise it bounces. Thenthe child's uncle, a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, explains to the child that dropping a round object like aball causes it to bounce. The uncle might explain this by employing general terms like "property" and "causation." If these are not meaningless terms, they must refer to something in experience.
But now let us consider a deep question that Hume raises: what experience has the uncle had that the child has not had? The difference, Hume notes, is that the uncle has seen a lot of balls bounce. Every time he dropped a ball it has bounced. And every time he has seen someone else do it, the result was the same. This is the basis-and the sole basis-of the uncle's superior knowledge.
Hume now draws his arresting conclusion: the uncle has no experience fundamentally different from the child's. He has merely repeated the experiment more times. Soit is custom or habit that makes him think, "Because I have seen thishappen many times before, therefore it must happen again." But the uncle has not established a necessary connection, merely an expectation derived from past experience. How does he know that past experience will repeat itself every time in the future? In truth, he does not know. In this way Hume concluded that the laws of cause and effect cannot be validated.
Hume is not denying that nature has laws but he is denying that we know what those laws are. When we posit laws, Hume suggests this is simply a grandiose way of saying "here is our best guess based on previous tries."
Bythe way it is no rebuttal to Hume to say, "Admittedly scientific lawsare not 100 percent true but at least they are 99.9 percent true. They may not be certain, but they are very likely to be true." How would you go about verifying this statement? How would you establish the likelihood, for instance, of Newton 's inverse square law? Itsays that every physical object in the universe attracts every otherphysical object with a force directly proportional to their masses andinversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. This law cannot be tested except by actually measuring the relationships between all objects in the universe! Since that is impossible, no finite number of tries can generate any conclusion about how probable Newton 's statement is. Tenmillion tries cannot establish 99.9 percent probability-or even 50percent probability-because there may be twenty million cases thathaven't been tried where Newton 's law may be found inadequate.
At this point we should pause to consider astronomer Neil deGrasse Tyson's exasperated outburst. Tysonbelieves it is simply ridiculous to say that scientific laws are notreliable: "Science's big-time success rests on the fact that it works." Ifscience did not accurately describe the world, then airplanes would notfly and people who undergo medical treatments would not be cured. Airplanes do fly and sick people are healed in the hospital, and on that basis science must be taken as true. Betterto fly in an airplane constructed by the laws of physics, Tysonscornfully says, than to board one "constructed by the rules of Vedicastrology."
Iagree that science works-and you won't get any argument from me aboutthe limits of Vedic astrology-but it doesn't follow that scientificlaws are known to be true in all cases. Consider this dismaying realization. Newton 's laws were for nearly two centuries regarded as absolutely true. They worked incredibly well. Indeed no body of general statements had ever been subjected to so much empirical verification. Everymachine incorporated its principles, and the entire IndustrialRevolution was based on Newtonian physics and Newtonian mechanics. Newton was vindicated millions of times a day, and his theories led to unprecedented material success.
YetEinstein's theories of relativity contradicted Newton, and despitetheir incalculable quantity of empirical verification, Newton's lawswere proven in important ways to be wrong or at least inadequate. Thisdoes not mean that Einstein's laws are absolutely true: in the futurethey too might be shown to be erroneous in certain respects.
From such examples, philosopher Karl Popper concluded that no scientific lawcan, in a positive sense, claim to prove anything at all. Science cannot verify theories, it can merely falsify them. When we have subjected a theory to expansive testing, and it has not been falsified, we can provisionally believe it to be true. This is not, however, because the theory has been proven, or even because it is likely to be true. Rather, we proceed in this way because, practically speaking, we don't have a better way to proceed. We give a theory the benefit of the doubt until we find out otherwise.
There is nothing wrong in all this, as long as we realize that scientific laws are not "laws of nature." They are human laws, and they represent a form of best-guessing about the world. What we call laws are nothing more than observed patterns and sequences. We think the world works in this way until future experience proves the contrary.
I am laying out the skeptical case here not because I want to endorse without reservations Hume's (or Popper's) philosophy. Rather, my goal is to overthrow Hume's argument against miracles using his own empirical and skeptical philosophy. Humeinsists that miracles violate the known laws of nature, but I say thatHume's own skeptical philosophy has shown that there are no known lawsof nature.
Miracles can be dismissed only if scientific laws are necessarily true-if they admit of no exceptions. But Hume has demonstrated that for no empirical proposition whatsoever do we know this to be the case. Miraclescan be deemed unscientific only if our knowledge of causation is soextensive that we can confidently dismiss supernatural causation. From Hume we learn how limited is our knowledge of causation, and thereforewe cannot write off the prospect of divine causation in exceptionalcases.
Sothe atheist case against miracles fails, and by the very standards ofreason and evidence advocated by the great skeptic, David Hume. The case against miracles in the name of reason is shown to be unreasonable. Faith is vindicated, not in any particular miracle, but at least in their possibility. Miracles can indeed happen, and nothing in modern science or modern knowledge shows they can't.
Bestselling author Dinesh D'Souza's new book What's So Great About Christianity has just been published by Regnery. Website: dineshdsouza.com.
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Reader Comments ( Page 3 of 6)
31. "Science cannot verify theories, it can merely falsify them."
That's right. And then science comes up with better theories, that describe the world we live in even more accurately.
The miracles don't get any better though. They just become more and more implausible. Virgin birth of a male homo sapiens. Sure...
Joe Bob at 4:49PM on Oct 16th 2007
32. To #6: B: There aren't a lot of postings because we're all getting sick of DD's bullsh*t. It's boring, his arguments are fallable, and he's not using spellcheck and his words are running together.
Linda at 5:00PM on Oct 16th 2007
33. I think DD is desperately trying to prep for the debate with Hitchens. He's going to get demolished...
Joe Bob at 4:59PM on Oct 16th 2007
34. What a has-been. I look forward to this column getting replaced by something entertaining due to this repetitive rhetoric.
If you are truely pompous enough to beleive you're going to be the first person to 'win' this argument in the history of civilization you're an even bigger douchebag than you make yourself out to be.
This column used to at least be thought provoking, now its just commercial space. Ponder this before you post another self-validating festival of circular logic:
The more we know, the less we understand.
The more we understand, the less we know.
The only true wisdom comes when you realize ALL your 'knowledge' is a delusion based on imperfect perception, with imperfect logic and incomplete information.
Take that to the pulpit and preach it.
Codiferus17 at 1:02PM on Oct 25th 2007
35. Miracles are one of the two biggest things about christianity that make me unable to be religious. They're the kinds of things that make me think the bible really needs to be put in the 'fantasy' section. Greek myths were replete with 'miracles.' They were a little more straight forward and called it magic, but in the end it was the same thing. Thus, I often question why a christian can accept Jesus transubstantiated water to wine, but scoff at the notions of a winged horse that can fly... or a man given a golden bridle with which to tame it... or a creature whose gaze turns men to stone.
If they can't accept the 'miracles' of the greeks, then why do they expect me to accept theirs? Because there are still people around who accept it as true? In that case I can't wait till they too go the way of the ancient greeks and we can move the bible into the 'mythology' section.
Somber at 6:11PM on Oct 16th 2007
36. Knight,
Again, PROVIDE EVIDENCE that miracles are IMPOSSIBLE.
YOU are making a cliam and I have every right, logically and ethically, to ask for evidence.
I know you will insist that you do not have to prove the unproven, but, that is a whimpy cop out.
Just admit that you have NO EVIDENCE and that your BELIEF is just that: an unsubstantiated belief.
"No amount of experimentation can ever prove me right; a single experiment can prove me wrong." Albert Einstein
ray at 6:32PM on Oct 16th 2007
37. Are miracles possible in an age of science? No. Something might appear to be a 'miracle' at first, but when we look at it there are very viable reasons for something happening, like a person surviving without a scratch in a car crash that totally DEMOLISHES a car or someone surviving a 'deadly' disease.
The 'miracle' was created to explain things that people didn't have the science or knowledge to explain at the time. Lightning.... it's a miracle 10,000 years ago.... but now we know the scientific method behind the creation of lightning and can create it ourselves (on a smaller scale) in laboratories.
Miracles simply do not exist today, and it's time to accept that they don't exist. When a person survives an illness that is supposed to be fatal... it's not a miracle, it's something in their own body that would not give up and kept them fighting the fatal disease until the disease gave up before them.
A person surviving at sea for a long period of time..... not a miracle, simply a chance thing that could happen to anyone, no 'divine intervention' there at all.
Christopher Kidwell at 7:07PM on Oct 16th 2007
38. You have to remember that Dinesh (or at least his people)comes from a Hindu background. They believe in thousands of gods, so it's not surprising that Dinesh should be the superstitious type. I think that's why he believes in three gods ("god", jesus and the holy ghost) instead of the One True God who's story is told in the Old Testament.
Franklin at 7:49PM on Oct 16th 2007
39. I WILL ALWAYS believe . The Bible tells us about those who would try to sway our beliefs . The fact that my daughter , who has autism , can now talk is proof of a GREAT miracle maker . Sure , you can say that "science" was used to get her to be able to talk but I BELIEVE GOD showed those who helped her , HOW to help her . Without God there is NO science !
His Child at 7:58PM on Oct 16th 2007
40. Too many believers don't know the timeline we're in. We're smack dab in the middle of the battle of Gog and Magog and they don't even know it. These liars and their useless tomes attack the God of heaven because they are tools of the evil one. Their fate is sealed. They have only a little while.
The Constitutionalist at 9:20PM on Oct 16th 2007
41. I tire of all of you godless heathen picking at believers. Go to the devil, eh? You love him so much. He's your god. You're too stupid to even realize how deceived you are. You get what you deserve. Roast in peace.
The Constitutionalist at 9:30PM on Oct 16th 2007
42. If anything is a miracle then everything must be a miracle. So, if everything is a miracle then nothing is a miracle. I see. It is a miracle your article did not put me to sleep. Still plugging away at that book? If it sells well could you please replace that picture you post on AOL. It really turns my gut to look at that poop eating grin! Hehe I said poop!
Steven at 10:30PM on Oct 16th 2007
43. Once again D'Souza shows his ignorance of science and defeats his own argument. First, scientific laws are "not necessarily true" because they are not based solely on deductive reasoning (eg. mathematics). To insist they they must be that way is to fall back on the Platonism or Pythagorean school of thought which fell out of favor after the Rennaisance. So for Dinesh to demand such a standard to "disprove" miracles is either a gross misunderstanding of how science should work or an intentional setting up of a strawman. Science no more disproves miracles "generally" than it does unicorns or leprechuns. It can disprove certain instances (which Dinesh admits he is not arguing for). However, when someone claims unicorns or leprechuns, or miralce exist, it is on the person making hte claim to prove it, not for science to disprove it. So in addition to his misunderstanding of science, Dinesh has no concept of where the burden of proof resides.
Moreover Dinesh's arument is circular and illogical. His argument is as follows: Since there aren't any "laws of nature" (as far as we know) a miracle cannot (as claimed by an atheists) violate a law which doesnt exist. However, and this is where his argument gets off track, If a miracle doesnt violate a law of nature then it is part of nature. If it is part of nature (although unknown to us, such as the black swan was unknown to Europeans) then it is by definition not a supernatural event. If it is not a supernatural event then it does not require divine intervention. Dinesh has thus refuted his own argument through his illogical reasoning based upon a faulty premise of what and how science is and works.
zararthustra at 10:45PM on Oct 16th 2007
44. To admit the possibility of "miracles" is to undermine the possibility of rationality and any knowledge based on cause and effect.
Consider the following scenario: Police break into a room and find a dead man lying on the floor with a bullet in his head and his wife standing over him holding a smoking gun. When put on trial for murder, the woman testifies that the smoking gun just "miraculously" appeared in her hand at the precise moment the bullet "miraculously" appeared in her husband brain, killing him. She asks Dinesh D'Souza to testify on her behalf that such an outlandish violation of rationality and causality is indeed possible. Dinesh happily complies.
If you were on the jury, would you vote to acquit?
emelpe at 10:44PM on Oct 16th 2007
45. Go to: www.medjugorje.org/
Apparently, the Virgin Mary has been appearing to 6 children (now grown and married with children) since 1981. The "children" have received daily visitation from the Virgin Mary and She, reportedly, has given messages to the world through one of the children and has also entrusted 10 secrets to these children. The most common "miracles"...the sun "changing" and cures of health..I find most uplifting and most perplexing. I don't know why this isn't on TV news and in newspapers daily! I can hardly wait to see what the Virgin Mary will leave as Her "sign" so that all will believe!
Sue Hamilton at 2:34PM on Oct 17th 2007