No, out of the thousands of "anecdotal sketchy claims of healings", 70 have been independently reviewed and approved authentic miracles having no natural explanation. The other healings reported are actual healings, but the Church did not investigate them or declare them a miracle.TexasScientist said:
You mean the 70 or so, so called Church verified miracles out of the thousands of anecdotal sketchy claims of healings. None require miraculous explanation. Why are there no obvious miracles, such as regrowing a limb or raising the indisputable dead?
Just ONE miracle is enough refute the atheist's/agnostic's claim. 70 of them exist in this one spot.
Quantum means small, at the atomic level. Atoms are still NOT nothing. No matter how much you want to believe it.TexasScientist said:
Your definition of nothing may not be applicable in quantum mechanics.
I can't find any superstitions in Christianity nor can I find myths.TexasScientist said:
Science is in the business of closing the gaps by replacing the superstition, and myths of religion with knowledge. That is something no religion has been able to replicate.
Catholicism isn't at odds with Science. It embraces it. Many of the world's greatest scientists were Christian.
Speaking myths and theories ... String theory was all the rage about 20 years ago, but now that has fallen out of favor with many. Maybe science may have more in common with religion that you care to believe.