surreptitious57 wrote:
It is not really evidence as such if it cannot be demonstrated since there is no objective means of knowing how true it is.
To whom? It's certainly very clear to the experiencer.
Now people can think or believe what ever they want but this does not automatically make it evidence.
Yeah, that's what I said: it's poor evidence for anyone who is not the experiencer.
It has to be capable of replication and inter subjectivity and objective and rigorous analysis.
Many things we consider real are not capable of your test. Your wife/husband's disposition, for example: does he or she truly "love" you? No empirical test will confirm it "rigorously". You're going to have to take something on faith there.
Conveniently moving the goalposts by claiming there are different types is simply not acceptable.
Rubbish. It's regular scientific practice -- and it's not "moving the goalposts, but rather stipulating a test appropriate to a particular subject matter. Science does that all the time. The test of linear measurement is no good for liquids, the test of volume measurement no good for distances, and so on.
The word has a specific meaning and as such it is the only one which should be used. None other. And so anyone telling me that they have evidence for God will be given a dictionary.
Good luck with that.

Even in the dictionary, "evidence" has several definitions, ranging from "facts," to "testimony," to "ostensible effects" to "manifest," and so on. It's a noun, it's a verb, and it changes its content depending on its context. So pick a dictionary and check: you'll see.