RE: What would you consider to be evidence for God?
August 3, 2015 at 10:35 am
(This post was last modified: August 3, 2015 at 10:40 am by Kingpin.)
Every fact someone provides might be accurate, and yet they might leave out crucial information needed to prove the claim: They might have insufficient evidence. One key step in evaluating evidence, therefore, is to decide if it is sufficient.
How do you know there’s enough? What makes evidence sufficient to prove a claim?
There is no simple answer to this question. To a large extent it’s a matter of individual judgement, based on what you know about a topic, the assumptions you make, your ability to draw conclusions from the facts available.
Generally speaking, of course, more evidence is better, and more types of evidence are better. Ok but what types of evidence, as evidence comes in may types. Including:
1. Statistics. Although technically just one form of number evidence, statistics are special enough to count as their own separate type of evidence, especially because they are so valuable at making evidence representative.
2. Names (for example, place names, names of individuals, organizations, movements, etc.)
3. Expert opinion
4. Specialized knowledge (the author’s own knowledge, not common knowledge, usually acquired through some sort of formal training)
5. Individual stories/examples, also known as anecdotal evidence (When the term “anecdotal” evidence is used, it is generally a negative or critical term suggesting that the evidence is not representative. Individual stories or examples, however, are often useful evidence.)
6. Physical details (sense data)—things you can see, hear, touch, smell or taste
- Dialogue (Speech of other people reported directly, exactly as spoken, usually with quotation marks [“ ”] around it and set off in separate paragraphs, one for each speaker. Technically this is a subset of physical detail, because it is something you can hear, but direct reporting of what people have said is important enough to be considered a separate category.)
7. Documentary evidence (evidence from documents). This includes all of the following, among many others:
- Letters
- Diaries
- Unpublished writings (early drafts of works published later; juvenile works by famous authors, etc.)
- Laws
- Administrative policies
- Court decisions
- Speeches, interviews, and other statements by relevant people
(August 3, 2015 at 9:32 am)Neimenovic Wrote: (August 3, 2015 at 9:30 am)lkingpinl Wrote: How do you determine valid evidence from invalid evidence?
God unambiguously revealing himself vs faces on toast.
But Vic, his face is there! I mean come on!
I'm glad you mention revealing himself. That's an important point. Revelation about someone comes about when that person speaks or communicates in some way. I can use biology and chemistry to study you and your physical makeup but I cannot get to know you unless you speak and reveal something about yourself. The Christian worldview asserts that God revealed himself in the person of Jesus Christ.