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You haven’t specified what you regard as “sufficient evidence”.
I already said that “By ‘sufficient evidence’, I mean evidence that is of sufficient quality to show that the claim being made is probably true.” What evidence is sufficient varies from claim to claim. I’m not going to provide you with an exact formula to determine if some pieces of evidence constitute sufficient evidence for a particular claim, since that would take too long, but when presented with particular things, I can tell you whether I think it’s evidence at all, whether that evidence is sufficient to justify belief in the claim, and why. I have already given you a list of things that I would consider sufficient evidence to justify belief in a god.
TruthSeeker60;7667748:
Since you evaded answering it, I’ll ask you again. If there is not
sufficient evidence presented for a belief, should a person:
A believe it
or
B not believe it?
If you think there’s an option C, please explain why options A and B are bad answers.
With regard to the existence of God is it impossible to know for certain - and unreasonable to state dogmatically - that there is insufficient evidence. Option C with such important issues is to suspend judgment rather than categorically affirm or deny.
If you suspend judgment, you don’t believe. Thus, the option “C” that you present is really a subset of option “B”. Once you realize this simple thing, you would see that the onus is on those who
do believe to present evidence to justify their belief.
I have already answered that question and you have ignored my reply:
One individual’s claim as opposed to that of billions of people for two thousand years!
First, I’ve addressed silly posts like this too many times.
Second, this doesn’t actually answer my mention of how ridiculous your position is.
Third, you’re not justified in saying “one person”. The majority of the world, like me, does not think that the supernatural claims of Christianity are true. Even if you pull something like “we all worship the same god” at least hundreds of millions of people in the world (including people of some religions like Buddhism) and growing are atheists. That doesn’t actually matter because…
Fourth,
the number of people who believe in something does not reverse the burden of proof.
Here are my other replies that you have ignored:
I think you’re lying because I don’t see any point made in this post that I didn’t address already. But lest you further accuse me of ignoring you, which I probably should do (because if I don’t you’ll feel entitled to an answer for every terrible point you make and feel that every terrible point that I don’t respond to for the fifth time is somehow validated by the fact that I stopped responding to it), I’ll address them.
Code:
If a claim is denied the person who denies it also has a burden of proof regardless of how popular the claim is. Otherwise you could go through life without making any positive assertions whatsoever! There has to be a reason for the denial, doesn't there?
Comments like this make me think that you don’t even understand what the burden of proof is. If Bob tells John that X happened, the onus is on Bob to show evidence for his claim. If there is no known evidence for Bob’s claim, or the evidence is not sufficient to justify believing in the claim, John is justified in not believing it. That’s what it mean to say that those who make the claim, rather than those who don’t believe (which is what I mean by deny), have the burden of proof.
John’s lack of belief is justified by the fact that there is no known evidence for Bob’s claim, or the evidence is not sufficient to justify believing in the claim. That’s the case even if two billion people believe Bob’s claim.
Now if John not only does not believe Bob’s claim, but also makes the claim that Bob was wrong, he would
then have a burden of proof along with Bob.
TruthSeeker60;7646098 said:
A person most definitely does not
have to prove an alternative in order to not believe what is being proposed.
Not in every case but he does when it concerns an interpretation of reality, the origin of a worldwide religion and the source of moral values accepted by every civilised person…
So would you say that if Bob makes a claim about “an interpretation of reality, the origin of a worldwide religion [or] the source of moral values accepted by every civilised person,” that John
has to believe Bob’s claim until he comes up with an alternative. If so, that is a form of an
argument from ignorance, which is fallacious.
One individual’s claim as opposed to that of billions of people for two thousand years!
I responded to this above in this post.
TruthSeeker60;7658205:
Finding an lack of evidence where one would expect the evidence to be if the evidence did exist, is evidence of the lack of evidence.
Expectations are not restricted to one point of view!
You obviously didn’t get my point, so I’ll make it more concrete so that you might comprehend it.
If Bob claims that there are marbles in John’s pocket, and John searches his pocket and finds no marbles, that’s evidence that there are no marbles in John’s pockets. Because there would be marbles in John’s pocket if Bob’s claim were true, not finding any marbles there when he searched was not just absence of evidence, but also evidence of absence. Do you disagree?
Continued…