Well, in the case of water to wine, that should be something that could be repeatable under laboratory conditions. That would be evidence enough of that particular miracle.
even if it was a miracle, it wouldn't necessarily mean what supporters claim it means. A miracle is not necessarily evidence of a god.
But again, you were saying that if God existed there'd be results. How do you go about deciding that there are none?
Then you're saying that we can't tell the difference between a universe with a god and a universe without one.
Oh, no. Don't you go shifting the burden of proof. The ones claiming that God exists (and I'm not saying you're one of them) are the ones who have the burden to prove his existence.
What, exactly, does Dawkins have to do with this discussion?
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