Why this word is great
THAUMATOPHOBIA — [Noun] The fear of, or aversion to, miracles, magic, or supernatural phenomena. From Ancient Greek θαῦμα (thaûma, "miracle, wonder") + -phobia ("fear of"), it is the dread of the inexplicable made manifest. Unlike thaumatomania (which craves the supernatural with obsessive hunger) or theophobia (which recoils from divine authority alone), thaumatophobia shudders at the uncanny itself. It is the child who covers their ears at a magician’s incantation, the villager who burns the witch not out of righteousness but terror, or the scientist who turns away from an anomaly in the data—not because it disproves their theory, but because it suggests a universe less obedient, less knowable, than they can bear. To fear miracles is to fear the surrender of reason to wonder, and to know that some doors, once opened, cannot be closed.