I'm not saying there is not repeatability in the universe. What I am saying is that it is a problem on a macroscopic scale. My breakfast may never Occur again since I might walk under a bus, when man is extinct no one will have breakfast ever again and so forth.
We can never go back to the thrirties, fifties or wherever. Yesterday cannot be completely recreated.
True, but we do have evidence of what happened then, and by comparing various pieces of evidence we can build up a model of how reliable and accurate each one is, and give a degree of justifiability to any individual claim.
Todays prevailing belief system scientism finds some concepts extremely hard to deal with and comes up with bizarre philosophical formulations like ''we don't know, but we know it isn't God'.
I'll accept that 'scientism-light' is probably a fairly broadly accepted view in the world: I don't think 'the majority' of the world think that the scientific method is the only acceptable method, or that it's applicable to every facet of existence, but I do think that the majority of the world probably see it is as the most reliable method worldview for judging reality.
As such, I'd say that 'we don't know, but we know it isn't God', isn't the scientific standpoint. The scientific standpoint is 'we don't know'. Alongside that is the scientific standpoint 'if you think it's God, demonstrate why', with the proviso that science operates on a presumption of naturalism and cause and effect, so attempts to devolve to uncaused causes and the like take you outside of the realm of science and into philosophy.
O.