This all seems redundant if you're going to make the claim that nothing is absolutely provable--something to which I agree. What I don't agree with, fundamentally, is that absence of evidence is evidence for absence. I can't accept that.As per the example given in the other thread with the raptor, I can keep obfuscating its existence to the point where there's absolutely no humanly possible method right now that will allow you to verify its existence--and your response to that is to lock up the individual who sees the raptor. Or call him stupid for believing its existence.Sure, you can do that, but you still haven't proven its nonexistence. Because you can't. So what you'd do in response to the person in question who sees the raptor is... vastly irrelevant.
Proof =/= evidence.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on February 09, 2015, 02:50:14 PMProof =/= evidence. Genuine question - what's the difference?
I'm not claiming a refusal by you to provide evidence for this raptor is evidence of absence. I'm saying attempts to observe the empirical properties of this raptor which repeatedly yield nothing is evidence of absence. Like, the absence of evidence for milk in the bowl is evidence of its absence.
Depends upon the nature of the deist gods in question. However, the complete absence of evidence for any empirical proposition relating to the potential existence of said deist gods would be the negative evidence.
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