But then you have a lot of external factors at play that propose alternate explanations and so one is standing on a very unreliable foundation. The definition of miracle could be different for people too. A miracle (an extraordinary one) could be experienced by you once or twice or maybe more times, and that could lead to believe in a God. But wouldn’t that relationship be very superficial? Submission would only come till I ‘know’ him hence the superiority of Knowledge over Miracles. That way, the whole purpose is shifted. That is why God insists upon not showing miracles while Quran was being revealed because making people believe in a God who can do extraordinary things is not the true purpose. It would only form a very shallow belief if not accompanied by prior knowledge. So I think miracles hold secondary importance, knowledge is the first one. Knowledge about the very ‘source’ from where the miracle is flowing.