Vlad,
What I am saying is that if a naturalist observed a resurrected person he would be forced either to accept a supernatural explanation or stretch his naturalism to accommodate it.
No – first he would be forced to examine whether his grounds for believing the person actually to have been resurrected were sound. As he couldn’t for example eliminate definitively the possibility that the subject had a hitherto unknown twin, the most he could conclude would be that he didn’t know. Absent any
a priori evidence that there even is such a thing as “the supernatural” or even a definition of that term moreover, he’d also have no logically sound basis just to jump to that option as his conclusion.
That would be the case if what you are now saying is that History is what ever happens irrespective of anyone's philosophy.
No, “history” as defined is what’s considered reliably to have happened on the basis of various objective tests of historicity.
Historically speaking then there is no reason specially to reject even the miraculous aspects of the gospels.
Yes there is – historically there is every reason to reject the miraculous aspects of the gospels, namely that such claims fail even the most basic objective tests of historicity.
Methodological naturalism though also has issues with history namely as far as we know the same circumstances are not repeated or repeatable. In fact that is why we have science.
Gibberish. Methodological naturalism has no issues with history because the objective tests of historicity do not require that there were, say, two Henry VIIIs – let alone thousands of them. Here they are again for you:
1. Relevance: is the evidence presented really relevant to the claim being made?
2. Validity: is the source what it appears to be or is it a fraud, forgery or mistranslation?
3. Identification: is the source clearly and accurately identified?
4. Expertise: is the source qualified to provide this evidence?
5. Bias: does the source have an interest in the topic of the evidence that might distort the evidence?
6. Internal consistency: does the information align with itself or contradict itself?
You'll note that none of these tests require the historical event to have happened more than once.