Do you consider that some claims of supernatural events in various religious texts (the resurrection of Jesus, the angel Moroni and the golden plates etc.) describe things that actually happened in the physical world? (I’m not talking about placebo-style faith healing, I’m talking about events that break the laws of physics as we know them).
Why assume that those events broke the laws of physcs? I perform actions everyday that my ancesters would interpret as breaking the laws of physics (as understood at that time).
He lists a series of events (the resurrection of Jesus, the angel Moroni and the golden plates) and implies that (if they happened) they broke the laws of physics (as we know them). Which laws of physics (as we know them) did these events break? I’m not being a smartass; I’m honestly asking for an elaboration.
I’m not assuming those events broke the laws of physics, since I don’t even believe they happened :)
I’m mostly wondering how calcsam accounts for that kind of events, the events-that-would-be-very-hard-to-exlain-with-current-science. I’m wondering if the explanation would be “God has the root password of the universe, he can suspend the laws of nature if he wants to” (the “traditional” account of Miracles as supernatural events), or “There are beings with high technology we can’t understand, their actions look like miracles to us”, or “Those things didn’t happen, they are symbolic and their main purpose is teaching us moral metaphors” or some other explanation.
I talked about the “laws of physics” mostly to exclude “explainable” miracles like placebo-style faith healings, for which religious and scientific explanations of the physical world don’t necessarily conflict with each other.
I’m wondering if the explanation would be “God has the root password of the universe, he can suspend the laws of nature if he wants to” (the “traditional” account of Miracles as supernatural events),
Absolutely no in LDS theology, God can not break the laws of nature.
There are beings with high technology we can’t understand, their actions look like miracles to us
Do you consider that some claims of supernatural events in various religious texts (the resurrection of Jesus, the angel Moroni and the golden plates etc.) describe things that actually happened in the physical world? (I’m not talking about placebo-style faith healing, I’m talking about events that break the laws of physics as we know them).
I am especially interested in this question.
Why assume that those events broke the laws of physcs? I perform actions everyday that my ancesters would interpret as breaking the laws of physics (as understood at that time).
He didn’t assume that; the post says
He lists a series of events (the resurrection of Jesus, the angel Moroni and the golden plates) and implies that (if they happened) they broke the laws of physics (as we know them). Which laws of physics (as we know them) did these events break? I’m not being a smartass; I’m honestly asking for an elaboration.
I’m not assuming those events broke the laws of physics, since I don’t even believe they happened :)
I’m mostly wondering how calcsam accounts for that kind of events, the events-that-would-be-very-hard-to-exlain-with-current-science. I’m wondering if the explanation would be “God has the root password of the universe, he can suspend the laws of nature if he wants to” (the “traditional” account of Miracles as supernatural events), or “There are beings with high technology we can’t understand, their actions look like miracles to us”, or “Those things didn’t happen, they are symbolic and their main purpose is teaching us moral metaphors” or some other explanation.
I talked about the “laws of physics” mostly to exclude “explainable” miracles like placebo-style faith healings, for which religious and scientific explanations of the physical world don’t necessarily conflict with each other.
Absolutely no in LDS theology, God can not break the laws of nature.
This is correct.