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The concepts of proof and evidence
#1
Not sure why the grey area, but it seems reasonable.

This was inspired by another thread, but in no way should continue that path. It's just an interesting concept. No I'm not going to quote dictionary definitions because society has understandings that override or augment definitions by fair margin.

Proof as a western concept is implicitly close to irrefutable - I don't know if much is truly irrefutable. You can give it to someone else and expect concurrence. 

Evidence is a piece of (usually) a body of more evidence that may or may not be proof, ever.

Take something like the HB laptop. It's got loads of evidence HB did lots of illegal things, but technically it's not proof. It's just lots of evidence. The feds finally acknowledged it is real, but in the end, pics can be manipulated, and illegality implied without context. A picture of you looking like you are doing lines is only evidence, but not proof -- even if it's a polaroid.

That said, it gets interesting that proof is both a social and individual construct. You can watch your friend buy drugs, crunch them up, and snort them, and that can be considered "proof", but only to you. You have proven to yourself, but to anyone else, it is just evidence. This is interesting because you have proof, but it is non-conveyable proof, only conveyable evidence.

You may be able to combine enough evidence to become conveyable proof to someone else, but that same "proof" remains only evidence to others.  You could tell the story to your friend's family, and they might have other evidence, none of which is proof, but can be proof as a whole to them.  They no longer have any doubts.  Let's say they have found baggies, seen their family member appearing hopped up a bunch of times, etc. and decide the body of evidence is proof.

That said, remember Hogzilla.  The news was filled with analysts and image experts offering proof that it was a hoax. One particular person was an FBI image analyst and who brought out his highlighter and circled pixels declaring it was absolute proof the image was faked. Well, years later National Geographic paid the guys to dig up the hog and it was exactly as they described in spite of the "proof" otherwise. Later, an even larger hog was killed on a Texas farm putting the issue to rest. It shows that really, the purported image manipulation was just evidence of an FBI analyst and proof of nothing.

Nowadays, we have limited our ability to present proof, and most things can only be considered as evidence - some strong and some weak. People used to say you need better video, and now we have it, but you can fake literally anything so it's pretty useless as proof, but can be strong evidence given the body of context etc. 

In middle school, we had a girl who told the class she had seen a ghost at the end of her bed. She came from a very poor family and lived in an old drafty (understatement) house. She was not prone to lying, but was mistreated a bit for just being extremely poor.  Without exception everyone laughed and called it nonsense. She had no evidence, but she had proof herself (assuming she wasn't lying).  I remember years later when I too got proof of such things thinking of the frustration that it is unconveyable proof, and only becomes potential evidence to someone else.
#2
This then leads to a very interesting construct. Other than first-hand sensing, there really is no “proof”, only conveyable or unconveyable evidence.

We are going to make a gross (and invalid) assumption here and consider first-hand sensing as proof to the individual. It used to be that you could convey visual and audio sensing as proof, but that is a thing of the past. Only the first-hand experiencer has proof.  A stronger than steel but lighter than paper metallic foil is just evidence (somewhat compelling) that you “saw a UFO crash”.  It can even be a group experience, and all of those people have proof, but anyone outside of that is relying on something else.

What is it? It’s faith. It can’t really be anything else.  If you didn’t personally experience it, it’s just faith that you have in the person or persons conveying it. Even if they bring corroborating evidence (pictures, a piece of clothing, etc), it ends up that all of your “proof” that you think you might have is just faith in the evidence.
Does this person/person seem credible? Is this scientist objective? Would these 50 former intelligence persons be lying? For centuries we were told glass “flowed” over time and we had “proof” of panes of glass thicker at the bottom, but it was really faith. Until someone noticed other panes that were thicker at the top did they actually determine that it simply wasn’t true (check the corning museum). But it was “proven” to the entire population because they had faith, not because it was proof.

If you aren’t a first-hand experiencer in something (and even then…), you can try and spin it however you like, but it’s just faith – in friends, family, the news, scientists, clergy, etc. etc.  just faith and trust, but not proof.
#3
(11-01-2025, 11:25 AM)Halfswede Wrote: That said, remember Hogzilla.  The news was filled with analysts and image experts offering proof that it was a hoax. One particular person was an FBI image analyst and who brought out his highlighter and circled pixels declaring it was absolute proof the image was faked. Well, years later National Geographic paid the guys to dig up the hog and it was exactly as they described in spite of the "proof" otherwise. Later, an even larger hog was killed on a Texas farm putting the issue to rest. It shows that really, the purported image manipulation was just evidence of an FBI analyst and proof of nothing.

I will add this: proof is not someone's opinion, like in the case of that FBI expert, it's something that is verifiable.

At least to me. Smile
#4
(11-01-2025, 12:26 PM)ArMaP Wrote: I will add this: proof is not someone's opinion, like in the case of that FBI expert, it's something that is verifiable.

At least to me. Smile

Yes, and this is the point. But many many did consider that proof, but it was really just faith (in him as an expert) and faith in your own eyes at seeing what he was manipulating you into focusing on.

You can take someone else's evidence, and repeat the process (for some things), and create your own proof, but it still ends with you and is not inherently conveyable as proof. For example someone says, "you can boil nettles and eat them without getting stung." You take whatever credibility your faith assigned them as evidence, repeat the process, and you can create your "proof". But you doing it doesn't make it proof for someone else.  They just have to have faith that you aren't a liar or did something else during the process that boiling just masked.
#5
Sometimes I get misdirected by my own biases about the word "evidence" and "proof."

From a conversational point, those words are used as 'finishers' a way to add a 'period' to the end of our arguments...

But clearly, your analysis shows that "evidence" is a product of reason.  It is a "conditional attribute' of an element of "proof."

Simultaneously you demonstrate that "proof" is also a perceptual result... encapsulated in concept... to define it as "finisher.'

Legally, we have relied on that school to make a practicable definition when it comes to judgements of law.

Even there... taken to it's extreme.... 'evidence' and 'proof' are a negotiated concept... 

Of course, these are only my opinions which in no way are intended to challenge your excellent OP...

Thanks.
#6
(11-01-2025, 01:05 PM)Maxmars Wrote: Sometimes I get misdirected by my own biases about the word "evidence" and "proof."

From a conversational point, those words are used as 'finishers' a way to add a 'period' to the end of our arguments...

...

This was really the inspiration for the thread. I didn't put a lot of thought into the meaning before, but as I started down the path of analyzing it a bit, I realized that proof is such an abstruse thing and outside of the individual experience relies almost entirely on faith -- not blind faith to be sure, but it still sort of shocked me how fragile proof really is and how different of a concept it is from evidence.

Thanks for participating.