Averroes wrote: ↑Wed May 30, 2018 11:52 pm
-1- wrote: ↑Wed May 30, 2018 11:01 pm
You erroneously equated the lack of proof with lack of evidence.
That is wrong. Evidence is not equal to proof.
I do not think so, and neither do the English dictionaries that I use to interpret English words that are used in current discourse!
From the Oxford dictionaries:
Proof:
Evidence or argument establishing a fact or the truth of a statement.
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/proof
From the Collins dictionary:
Proof: Proof is a fact, argument, or piece of
evidence which shows that something is definitely true or definitely exists.
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dicti ... sh/proof_1
Moreover, the Thesaurus lists "proof" and "evidence" as synonyms:
http://www.thesaurus.com/browse/proof
-1- wrote: ↑Wed May 30, 2018 11:01 pm
"Are you now taking all that back? Remark, you have the right to do that.

"
My answer:
NO, I am not taking any of it back.
That is even better then! Always a great pleasure to exchange with you.
I can't teach you the language. If you haven't acquired the ability to separate the meanings of words by nuances, then there is nobody who can teach you that.
Since you are now arguing a hopeless argument that rests on your ability to convince the English-speaking world that we can dispense with the word "proof" and just use "evidence" in its place (after all, you insist they mean the same thing), I think it's best to leave you alone and slowly walk away.
Language is not tricky. But if you mix up the word "proof" and "evidence", and claim they are synonyms, then I have nothing more to say to you.
I rest my case.
FYI:
Peter is taller than Mike.
Mike is taller then John.
Therefore Peter is taller than John.
There is a proof, with no evidence.
-------------------------------
We found some evidence on the murder scene: a footprint of MIke's shoe.
But it's not proof that Mike was the murderer. Someone else could have worn his shoes.
There is an evidence without proof.
-------------------------------
Would it help you if I clarified it even more, by saying that the dictionaries you quoted used colloquial meanings of the words? In mathematics, in logic, in philosophy there exist proofs, that are not supported by evidence. In physics, and in all sciences, there are evidences that don't yield a proof. This is a slightly different meaning of "proof" and "evidence" from how your sources used these words.
I can't believe I have to teach you this grade seven stuff about the language.
If you clicked on the link "definition of proof" in the SAME website you quoted, you would have found this:
Proof: noun:
evidence sufficient to establish a thing as true, or to produce belief in its truth.
anything serving as such evidence:
http://www.dictionary.com/browse/proof
What you need to observe is that "evidence" is only "proof" if it meets certain criteria, and in some cases the evidence does not meet those criteria.
In science, specifically, evidence never satisfies the criteria of serving as proof of a theory, evidence can only be proof of the failing of a theory.
And this is where we started.
Now let's examine the Collins dictionary quote by you:
From the Collins dictionary:
Proof: Proof is a fact, argument, or piece of
evidence which shows that something is definitely true or definitely exists.
Here, if you watch carefully, the connective "which" will single out those cases, in which evidence is proof. But in not every case is evidence proof. Only in those cases, in which evidence shows that something is definitely true. But it is not the case in every case.
Again:
In science, there is no evidence that proves a theory. The right evidence can always disprove a theory.
Again, you showed that you misunderstand the nature of scientific enquiry. You proved that with your thesis beautifully.
I did not get this out of thin air. It is taught in higher educational institutes.
----------------------------------
The problem with deeply religious thinkers when they attack scientific theories, such as Darwinism, is that they argue about the lack of proof. There can never be found a definite proof to prove Darwinism works. It is reasonable to think it works, it only goes to show that it works, it is intuitive knowledge that it works, but it can never be proven that it works. However, that is the nature of science.