Following on from some of the discussion on the Jesus thread today, and previous threads over the years, I'm wondering what in philosophical terms a miracle claim means. Obviously there is a colloquial sense in which it's a fortuitous, or unusual event but in the more 'religious' sense, it seems to be something that cannot happen without some force 'breaking the laws of physics' or some such. Since those laws are just descriptions of events, how can we judge any new event as not just giving us more information?
Those making miracle claims might count to the unlikeliest of any event, but unlikely events, and indeed extraordinarily unlikely events happen all the time. In that view they are highly likely, just not the specific incidence.
This is further confused by the claims of some that there are miracles when the event itself has a relatively high probability - as an example on this board, Alan Burns attributing finding a contact lens to a miracle.
I'm left baffled as to what is being claimed, and whether it is anything other than a form of poetic conceit even when used in the religious sense.