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<blockquote data-quote="Ayasano" data-source="post: 90242" data-attributes="member: 4804"><p>It's difficult, but not impossible, because there's a very fine line between evidence of absence and absence of evidence.</p><p></p><p>This quote sums it up quite well:</p><p></p><p>"If someone were to assert that there is an elephant on the quad, then the failure to observe an elephant there would be good reason to think that there is no elephant there. But if someone were to assert that there is a flea on the quad, then one's failure to observe it there would not constitute good evidence that there is no flea on the quad. The salient difference between these two cases is that in the one, but not the other, we should expect to see some evidence of the entity if in fact it existed. Moreover, the justification conferred in such cases will be proportional to the ratio between the amount of evidence that we do have and the amount that we should expect to have if the entity existed. If the ratio is small, then little justification is conferred on the belief that the entity does not exist. [For example] in the absence of evidence rendering the existence of some entity probable, we are justified in believing that it does not exist, provided that (1) it is not something that might leave no traces and (2) we have comprehensively surveyed the area where the evidence would be found if the entity existed..."</p><p>—J.P. Moreland and W.L. Craig, <em>Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ayasano, post: 90242, member: 4804"] It's difficult, but not impossible, because there's a very fine line between evidence of absence and absence of evidence. This quote sums it up quite well: "If someone were to assert that there is an elephant on the quad, then the failure to observe an elephant there would be good reason to think that there is no elephant there. But if someone were to assert that there is a flea on the quad, then one's failure to observe it there would not constitute good evidence that there is no flea on the quad. The salient difference between these two cases is that in the one, but not the other, we should expect to see some evidence of the entity if in fact it existed. Moreover, the justification conferred in such cases will be proportional to the ratio between the amount of evidence that we do have and the amount that we should expect to have if the entity existed. If the ratio is small, then little justification is conferred on the belief that the entity does not exist. [For example] in the absence of evidence rendering the existence of some entity probable, we are justified in believing that it does not exist, provided that (1) it is not something that might leave no traces and (2) we have comprehensively surveyed the area where the evidence would be found if the entity existed..." —J.P. Moreland and W.L. Craig, [I]Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview[/I] [/QUOTE]
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