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Evidence

Evidence for a proposition is what supports the proposition. It is usually understood as an indication that the supported proposition is true. What role evidence plays and how it is conceived varies from field to field.

In epistemology, evidence is what justifies beliefs or what makes it rational to hold a certain doxastic attitude. For example, a perceptual experience of a tree may act as evidence that justifies the belief that there is a tree. In this role, evidence is usually understood as a private mental state. Important topics in this field include the questions of what the nature of these mental states is, for example, whether they have to be propositional, and whether misleading mental states can still qualify as evidence. In phenomenology, evidence is understood in a similar sense. Here, however, it is limited to intuitive knowledge that provides immediate access to truth and is therefore indubitable. In this role, it is supposed to provide ultimate justifications for basic philosophical principles and thus turn philosophy into a rigorous science. However, it is highly controversial whether evidence can meet these requirements. Other fields, including the sciences and the law, tend to emphasize more the public nature of evidence (for example, scientists tend to focus on how the data used during statistical inference are generated).[1] In philosophy of science, evidence is understood as that which confirms or disconfirms scientific hypotheses. Measurements of Mercury's "anomalous" orbit, for example, are seen as evidence that confirms Einstein's theory of general relativity. In order to play the role of neutral arbiter between competing theories, it is important that scientific evidence is public and uncontroversial, like observable physical objects or events, so that the proponents of the different theories can agree on what the evidence is. This is ensured by following the scientific method and tends to lead to an emerging scientific consensus through the gradual accumulation of evidence. Two issues for the scientific conception of evidence are the problem of underdetermination, i.e. that the available evidence may support competing theories equally well, and theory-ladenness, i.e. that what some scientists consider the evidence to be may already involve various theoretical assumptions not shared by other scientists. It is often held that there are two kinds of evidence: intellectual evidence or what is self-evident and empirical evidence or evidence accessible through the senses.

In order for something to act as evidence for a hypothesis, it has to stand in the right relation to it. In philosophy, this is referred to as the "evidential relation" and there are competing theories about what this relation has to be like. Probabilistic approaches hold that something counts as evidence if it increases the probability of the supported hypothesis. According to hypothetico-deductivism, evidence consists in observational consequences of the hypothesis. The positive-instance approach states that an observation sentence is evidence for a universal hypothesis if the sentence describes a positive instance of this hypothesis. The evidential relation can occur in various degrees of strength. These degrees range from direct proof of the truth of a hypothesis to weak evidence that is merely consistent with the hypothesis but does not rule out other, competing hypotheses, as in circumstantial evidence.

In law, rules of evidence govern the types of evidence that are admissible in a legal proceeding. Types of legal evidence include testimony, documentary evidence, and physical evidence.[2] The parts of a legal case that are not in controversy are known, in general, as the "facts of the case." Beyond any facts that are undisputed, a judge or jury is usually tasked with being a trier of fact for the other issues of a case. Evidence and rules are used to decide questions of fact that are disputed, some of which may be determined by the legal burden of proof relevant to the case. Evidence in certain cases (e.g. capital crimes) must be more compelling than in other situations (e.g. minor civil disputes), which drastically affects the quality and quantity of evidence necessary to decide a case.

Nature of evidence

Understood in its broadest sense, evidence for a proposition is what supports this proposition. Traditionally, the term is sometimes understood in a narrower sense: as the intuitive knowledge of facts that are considered indubitable.[3][4][5] In this sense, only the singular form is used. This meaning is found especially in phenomenology, in which evidence is elevated to one of the basic principles of philosophy, giving philosophy the ultimate justifications that are supposed to turn it into a rigorous science.[6][4][7] In a more modern usage, the plural form is also used. In academic discourse, evidence plays a central role in epistemology and in the philosophy of science. Reference to evidence is made in many different fields, like in science, in the legal system, in history, in journalism and in everyday discourse.[8][9][10] A variety of different attempts have been made to conceptualize the nature of evidence. These attempts often proceed by starting with intuitions from one field or in relation to one theoretical role played by evidence and go on to generalize these intuitions, leading to a universal definition of evidence.[8][9][11]

One important intuition is that evidence is what justifies beliefs. This line of thought is usually followed in epistemology and tends to explain evidence in terms of private mental states, for example, as experiences, other beliefs or knowledge. This is closely related to the idea that how rational someone is, is determined by how they respond to evidence.[8][9][12][13][14] Another intuition, which is more dominant in the philosophy of science, focuses on evidence as that which confirms scientific hypotheses and arbitrates between competing theories.[15] On this view, it is essential that evidence is public so that different scientists can share the same evidence. This leaves publicly observable phenomena like physical objects and events as the best candidates for evidence, unlike private mental states.[8][9][14] One problem with these approaches is that the resulting definitions of evidence, both within a field and between fields, vary a lot and are incompatible with each other. For example, it is not clear what a bloody knife and a perceptual experience have in common when both are treated as evidence in different disciplines. This suggests that there is no unitary concept corresponding to the different theoretical roles ascribed to evidence, i.e. that we do not always mean the same thing when we talk of evidence.[8][9][11]

Important theorists of evidence include Bertrand Russell, Willard Van Orman Quine, the logical positivists, Timothy Williamson, Earl Conee and Richard Feldman.[9] Russell, Quine and the logical positivists belong to the empiricist tradition and hold that evidence consists in sense data, stimulation of one's sensory receptors and observation statements, respectively.[16] According to Williamson, all and only knowledge constitute evidence.[17] Conee and Feldman hold that only one's current mental states should be considered evidence.[11]

In epistemology

The guiding intuition within epistemology concerning the role of evidence is that it is what justifies beliefs.[8][9] For example, Phoebe's auditory experience of the music justifies her belief that the speakers are on. Evidence has to be possessed by the believer in order to play this role.[11] So Phoebe's own experiences can justify her own beliefs but not someone else's beliefs. Some philosophers hold that evidence possession is restricted to conscious mental states, for example, to sense data.[9] This view has the implausible consequence that many of simple everyday-beliefs would be unjustified. The more common view is that all kinds of mental states, including stored beliefs that are currently unconscious, can act as evidence.[11][18] It is sometimes argued that the possession of a mental state capable of justifying another is not sufficient for the justification to happen. The idea behind this line of thought is that justified belief has to be connected to or grounded in the mental state acting as its evidence.[11][19] So Phoebe's belief that the speakers are on is not justified by her auditory experience if the belief is not based in this experience. This would be the case, for example, if Phoebe has both the experience and the belief but is unaware of the fact that the music is produced by the speakers.

It is sometimes held that only propositional mental states can play this role, a position known as "propositionalism".[17][20] A mental state is propositional if it is an attitude directed at a propositional content. Such attitudes are usually expressed by verbs like "believe" together with a that-clause, as in "Robert believes that the corner shop sells milk".[21][22] Such a view denies that sensory impressions can act as evidence. This is often held as an argument against this view since sensory impressions are commonly treated as evidence.[8][16] Propositionalism is sometimes combined with the view that only attitudes to true propositions can count as evidence.[17] On this view, the belief that the corner shop sells milk only constitutes evidence for the belief that the corner shop sells dairy products if the corner shop actually sells milk. Against this position, it has been argued that evidence can be misleading but still count as evidence.[11][9]

This line of thought is often combined with the idea that evidence, propositional or otherwise, determines what it is rational for us to believe.[9][8] But it can be rational to have a false belief.[23][24] This is the case when we possess misleading evidence. For example, it was rational for Neo in the Matrix movie to believe that he was living in the 20th century because of all the evidence supporting his belief despite the fact that this evidence was misleading since it was part of a simulated reality. This account of evidence and rationality can also be extended to other doxastic attitudes, like disbelief and suspension of belief. So rationality does not just demand that we believe something if we have decisive evidence for it, it also demands that we disbelieve something if we have decisive evidence against it and that we suspend belief if we lack decisive evidence either way.[9][8][11]

In phenomenology

The meaning of the term "evidence" in phenomenology shows many parallels to its epistemological usage, but it is understood in a narrower sense. Thus, evidence here specifically refers to intuitive knowledge, which is described as "self-given" (selbst-gegeben).[25] This contrasts with empty intentions, in which one refers to states of affairs through a certain opinion, but without an intuitive presentation.[26] This is why evidence is often associated with the controversial thesis that it constitutes an immediate access to truth.[27] In this sense, the evidently given phenomenon guarantees its own truth and is therefore considered indubitable. Due to this special epistemological status of evidence, it is regarded in phenomenology as the basic principle of all philosophy.[25][6] In this form, it represents the lowest foundation of knowledge, which consists of indubitable insights upon which all subsequent knowledge is built.[28] This evidence-based method is meant to make it possible for philosophy to overcome many of the traditionally unresolved disagreements and thus become a rigorous science.[29][30][6] This far-reaching claim of phenomenology, based on absolute certainty, is one of the focal points of criticism by its opponents. Thus, it has been argued that even knowledge based on self-evident intuition is fallible. This can be seen, for example, in the fact that even among phenomenologists, there is much disagreement about the basic structures of experience.[31]

In philosophy of science

In the sciences, evidence is understood as what confirms or disconfirms scientific hypotheses.[8][9] The term "confirmation" is sometimes used synonymously with that of "evidential support".[15] Measurements of Mercury's "anomalous" orbit, for example, are seen as evidence that confirms Einstein's theory of general relativity. This is especially relevant for choosing between competing theories. So in the case above, evidence plays the role of neutral arbiter between Newton's and Einstein's theory of gravitation.[9] This is only possible if scientific evidence is public and uncontroversial so that proponents of competing scientific theories agree on what evidence is available. These requirements suggest scientific evidence consists not of private mental states but of public physical objects or events.[9][14]

It is often held that evidence is in some sense prior to the hypotheses it confirms. This was sometimes understood as temporal priority, i.e. that we come first to possess the evidence and later form the hypothesis through induction. But this temporal order is not always reflected in scientific practice, where experimental researchers may look for a specific piece of evidence in order to confirm or disconfirm a pre-existing hypothesis.[9] Logical positivists, on the other hand, held that this priority is semantic in nature, i.e. that the meanings of the theoretical terms used in the hypothesis are determined by what would count as evidence for them. Counterexamples for this view come from the fact that our idea of what counts as evidence may change while the meanings of the corresponding theoretical terms remain constant.[9] The most plausible view is that this priority is epistemic in nature, i.e. that our belief in a hypothesis is justified based on the evidence while the justification for the belief in the evidence does not depend on the hypothesis.[9]

A central issue for the scientific conception of evidence is the problem of underdetermination, i.e. that the evidence available supports competing theories equally well.[32][33] So, for example, evidence from our everyday life about how gravity works confirms Newton's and Einstein's theory of gravitation equally well and is therefore unable to establish consensus among scientists. But in such cases, it is often the gradual accumulation of evidence that eventually leads to an emerging consensus. This evidence-driven process towards consensus seems to be one hallmark of the sciences not shared by other fields.[9][34]

Another problem for the conception of evidence in terms of confirmation of hypotheses is that what some scientists consider the evidence to be may already involve various theoretical assumptions not shared by other scientists. This phenomenon is known as theory-ladenness.[9][35] Some cases of theory-ladenness are relatively uncontroversial, for example, that the numbers output by a measurement device need additional assumptions about how this device works and what was measured in order to count as meaningful evidence.[36] Other putative cases are more controversial, for example, the idea that different people or cultures perceive the world through different, incommensurable conceptual schemes, leading them to very different impressions about what is the case and what evidence is available.[37] Theory-ladenness threatens to impede the role of evidence as neutral arbiter since these additional assumptions may favor some theories over others. It could thereby also undermine a consensus to emerge since the different parties may be unable to agree even on what the evidence is.[9][38] When understood in the widest sense, it is not controversial that some form of theory-ladenness exists. But it is questionable whether it constitutes a serious threat to scientific evidence when understood in this sense.[9]

Nature of the evidential relation

Philosophers in the 20th century started to investigate the "evidential relation", the relation between evidence and the proposition supported by it.[1] The issue of the nature of the evidential relation concerns the question of what this relation has to be like in order for one thing to justify a belief or to confirm a hypothesis.[15] Important theories in this field include the probabilistic approach, hypothetico-deductivism and the positive-instance approach.[8][39]

Probabilistic approaches, also referred to as Bayesian confirmation theory, explain the evidential relation in terms of probabilities. They hold that all that is necessary is that the existence of the evidence increases the likelihood that the hypothesis is true. This can be expressed mathematically as  .[40][41] In words: a piece of evidence (E) confirms a hypothesis (H) if the conditional probability of this hypothesis relative to the evidence is higher than the unconditional probability of the hypothesis by itself.[42] Smoke (E), for example, is evidence that there is a fire (H), because the two usually occur together, which is why the likelihood of fire given that there is smoke is higher than the likelihood of fire by itself. On this view, evidence is akin to an indicator or a symptom of the truth of the hypothesis.[11] Against this approach, it has been argued that it is too liberal because it allows accidental generalizations as evidence. Finding a nickel in one's pocket, for example, raises the probability of the hypothesis that "All the coins in my pockets are nickels". But, according to Alvin Goldman, it should not be considered evidence for this hypothesis since there is no lawful connection between this one nickel and the other coins in the pocket.[9]

Hypothetico-deductivism is a non-probabilistic approach that characterizes the evidential relations in terms of deductive consequences of the hypothesis. According to this view, "evidence for a hypothesis is a true observational consequence of that hypothesis".[8][15][43][44] One problem with the characterization so far is that hypotheses usually contain relatively little information and therefore have few if any deductive observational consequences. So the hypothesis by itself that there is a fire does not entail that smoke is observed. Instead, various auxiliary assumptions have to be included about the location of the smoke, the fire, the observer, the lighting conditions, the laws of chemistry, etc. In this way, the evidential relation becomes a three-place relation between evidence, hypothesis and auxiliary assumptions.[15][45] This means that whether a thing is evidence for a hypothesis depends on the auxiliary assumptions one holds. This approach fits well with various scientific practices. For example, it is often the case that experimental scientists try to find evidence that would confirm or disconfirm a proposed theory. The hypothetico-deductive approach can be used to predict what should be observed in an experiment if the theory was true.[45] It thereby explains the evidential relation between the experiment and the theory.[15] One problem with this approach is that it cannot distinguish between relevant and certain irrelevant cases. So if smoke is evidence for the hypothesis "there is fire", then it is also evidence for conjunctions including this hypothesis, for example, "there is fire and Socrates was wise", despite the fact that Socrates's wisdom is irrelevant here.[8]

According to the positive-instance approach, an observation sentence is evidence for a universal hypothesis if the sentence describes a positive instance of this hypothesis.[39][46][47] For example, the observation that "this swan is white" is an instance of the universal hypothesis that "all swans are white". This approach can be given a precise formulation in first-order logic: a proposition is evidence for a hypothesis if it entails the "development of the hypothesis".[8][15] Intuitively, the development of the hypothesis is what the hypothesis states if it was restricted to only the individuals mentioned in the evidence. In the case above, we have the hypothesis " " (all swans are white) which, when restricted to the domain "{a}", containing only the one individual mentioned in the evidence, entails the evidence, i.e. " " (this swan is white).[8][15] One important shortcoming of this approach is that it requires that the hypothesis and the evidence are formulated in the same vocabulary, i.e. use the same predicates, like " " or " " above. But many scientific theories posit theoretical objects, like electrons or strings in physics, that are not directly observable and therefore cannot show up in the evidence as conceived here.[8][15]

Empirical evidence (in science)

In scientific research evidence is accumulated through observations of phenomena that occur in the natural world, or which are created as experiments in a laboratory or other controlled conditions. Scientists tend to focus on how the data used during statistical inference are generated.[1] Scientific evidence usually goes towards supporting or rejecting a hypothesis.

The burden of proof is on the person making a contentious claim. Within science, this translates to the burden resting on presenters of a paper, in which the presenters argue for their specific findings. This paper is placed before a panel of judges where the presenter must defend the thesis against all challenges.

When evidence is contradictory to predicted expectations, the evidence and the ways of making it are often closely scrutinized (see experimenter's regress) and only at the end of this process is the hypothesis rejected: this can be referred to as 'refutation of the hypothesis'. The rules for evidence used by science are collected systematically in an attempt to avoid the bias inherent to anecdotal evidence.

Law

 
The balance scales seen in depictions of Lady Justice can be seen as representing the weighing of evidence in a legal proceeding.

In law, the production and presentation of evidence depend first on establishing on whom the burden of proof lies. Admissible evidence is that which a court receives and considers for the purposes of deciding a particular case. Two primary burden-of-proof considerations exist in law. The first is on whom the burden rests. In many, especially Western, courts, the burden of proof is placed on the prosecution in criminal cases and the plaintiff in civil cases. The second consideration is the degree of certitude proof must reach, depending on both the quantity and quality of evidence. These degrees are different for criminal and civil cases, the former requiring evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, the latter considering only which side has the preponderance of evidence, or whether the proposition is more likely true or false. The decision-maker, often a jury, but sometimes a judge decides whether the burden of proof has been fulfilled.

After deciding who will carry the burden of proof, the evidence is first gathered and then presented before the court:

Collection

 
An FBI Evidence Response Team gathering evidence by dusting an area for fingerprints

In a criminal investigation, rather than attempting to prove an abstract or hypothetical point, the evidence gatherers attempt to determine who is responsible for a criminal act. The focus of criminal evidence is to connect physical evidence and reports of witnesses to a specific person.[48]

Presentation

The path that physical evidence takes from the scene of a crime or the arrest of a suspect to the courtroom is called the chain of custody. In a criminal case, this path must be clearly documented or attested to by those who handled the evidence. If the chain of evidence is broken, a defendant may be able to persuade the judge to declare the evidence inadmissible.

Presenting evidence before the court differs from the gathering of evidence in important ways. Gathering evidence may take many forms; presenting evidence that tends to prove or disprove the point at issue is strictly governed by rules. Failure to follow these rules leads to any number of consequences. In law, certain policies allow (or require) evidence to be excluded from consideration based either on indicia relating to reliability, or broader social concerns. Testimony (which tells) and exhibits (which show) are the two main categories of evidence presented at a trial or hearing. In the United States, evidence in federal court is admitted or excluded under the Federal Rules of Evidence.[49]

Burden of proof

The burden of proof is the obligation of a party in an argument or dispute to provide sufficient evidence to shift the other party's or a third party's belief from their initial position. The burden of proof must be fulfilled by both establishing confirming evidence and negating oppositional evidence. Conclusions drawn from evidence may be subject to criticism based on a perceived failure to fulfill the burden of proof.

Two principal considerations are:

  1. On whom does the burden of proof rest?
  2. To what degree of certitude must the assertion be supported?

The latter question depends on the nature of the point under contention and determines the quantity and quality of evidence required to meet the burden of proof.

In a criminal trial in the United States, for example, the prosecution carries the burden of proof since the defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Similarly, in most civil procedures, the plaintiff carries the burden of proof and must convince a judge or jury that the preponderance of the evidence is on their side. Other legal standards of proof include "reasonable suspicion", "probable cause" (as for arrest), "prima facie evidence", "credible evidence", "substantial evidence", and "clear and convincing evidence".

In a philosophical debate, there is an implicit burden of proof on the party asserting a claim, since the default position is generally one of neutrality or unbelief. Each party in a debate will therefore carry the burden of proof for any assertion they make in the argument, although some assertions may be granted by the other party without further evidence. If the debate is set up as a resolution to be supported by one side and refuted by another, the overall burden of proof is on the side supporting the resolution.

Specific types of evidence

See also

References

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External links

evidence, other, uses, disambiguation, proposition, what, supports, proposition, usually, understood, indication, that, supported, proposition, true, what, role, evidence, plays, conceived, varies, from, field, field, epistemology, evidence, what, justifies, b. For other uses see Evidence disambiguation Evidence for a proposition is what supports the proposition It is usually understood as an indication that the supported proposition is true What role evidence plays and how it is conceived varies from field to field In epistemology evidence is what justifies beliefs or what makes it rational to hold a certain doxastic attitude For example a perceptual experience of a tree may act as evidence that justifies the belief that there is a tree In this role evidence is usually understood as a private mental state Important topics in this field include the questions of what the nature of these mental states is for example whether they have to be propositional and whether misleading mental states can still qualify as evidence In phenomenology evidence is understood in a similar sense Here however it is limited to intuitive knowledge that provides immediate access to truth and is therefore indubitable In this role it is supposed to provide ultimate justifications for basic philosophical principles and thus turn philosophy into a rigorous science However it is highly controversial whether evidence can meet these requirements Other fields including the sciences and the law tend to emphasize more the public nature of evidence for example scientists tend to focus on how the data used during statistical inference are generated 1 In philosophy of science evidence is understood as that which confirms or disconfirms scientific hypotheses Measurements of Mercury s anomalous orbit for example are seen as evidence that confirms Einstein s theory of general relativity In order to play the role of neutral arbiter between competing theories it is important that scientific evidence is public and uncontroversial like observable physical objects or events so that the proponents of the different theories can agree on what the evidence is This is ensured by following the scientific method and tends to lead to an emerging scientific consensus through the gradual accumulation of evidence Two issues for the scientific conception of evidence are the problem of underdetermination i e that the available evidence may support competing theories equally well and theory ladenness i e that what some scientists consider the evidence to be may already involve various theoretical assumptions not shared by other scientists It is often held that there are two kinds of evidence intellectual evidence or what is self evident and empirical evidence or evidence accessible through the senses In order for something to act as evidence for a hypothesis it has to stand in the right relation to it In philosophy this is referred to as the evidential relation and there are competing theories about what this relation has to be like Probabilistic approaches hold that something counts as evidence if it increases the probability of the supported hypothesis According to hypothetico deductivism evidence consists in observational consequences of the hypothesis The positive instance approach states that an observation sentence is evidence for a universal hypothesis if the sentence describes a positive instance of this hypothesis The evidential relation can occur in various degrees of strength These degrees range from direct proof of the truth of a hypothesis to weak evidence that is merely consistent with the hypothesis but does not rule out other competing hypotheses as in circumstantial evidence In law rules of evidence govern the types of evidence that are admissible in a legal proceeding Types of legal evidence include testimony documentary evidence and physical evidence 2 The parts of a legal case that are not in controversy are known in general as the facts of the case Beyond any facts that are undisputed a judge or jury is usually tasked with being a trier of fact for the other issues of a case Evidence and rules are used to decide questions of fact that are disputed some of which may be determined by the legal burden of proof relevant to the case Evidence in certain cases e g capital crimes must be more compelling than in other situations e g minor civil disputes which drastically affects the quality and quantity of evidence necessary to decide a case Contents 1 Nature of evidence 1 1 In epistemology 1 2 In phenomenology 1 3 In philosophy of science 2 Nature of the evidential relation 3 Empirical evidence in science 4 Law 4 1 Collection 4 2 Presentation 4 3 Burden of proof 5 Specific types of evidence 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksNature of evidence EditUnderstood in its broadest sense evidence for a proposition is what supports this proposition Traditionally the term is sometimes understood in a narrower sense as the intuitive knowledge of facts that are considered indubitable 3 4 5 In this sense only the singular form is used This meaning is found especially in phenomenology in which evidence is elevated to one of the basic principles of philosophy giving philosophy the ultimate justifications that are supposed to turn it into a rigorous science 6 4 7 In a more modern usage the plural form is also used In academic discourse evidence plays a central role in epistemology and in the philosophy of science Reference to evidence is made in many different fields like in science in the legal system in history in journalism and in everyday discourse 8 9 10 A variety of different attempts have been made to conceptualize the nature of evidence These attempts often proceed by starting with intuitions from one field or in relation to one theoretical role played by evidence and go on to generalize these intuitions leading to a universal definition of evidence 8 9 11 One important intuition is that evidence is what justifies beliefs This line of thought is usually followed in epistemology and tends to explain evidence in terms of private mental states for example as experiences other beliefs or knowledge This is closely related to the idea that how rational someone is is determined by how they respond to evidence 8 9 12 13 14 Another intuition which is more dominant in the philosophy of science focuses on evidence as that which confirms scientific hypotheses and arbitrates between competing theories 15 On this view it is essential that evidence is public so that different scientists can share the same evidence This leaves publicly observable phenomena like physical objects and events as the best candidates for evidence unlike private mental states 8 9 14 One problem with these approaches is that the resulting definitions of evidence both within a field and between fields vary a lot and are incompatible with each other For example it is not clear what a bloody knife and a perceptual experience have in common when both are treated as evidence in different disciplines This suggests that there is no unitary concept corresponding to the different theoretical roles ascribed to evidence i e that we do not always mean the same thing when we talk of evidence 8 9 11 Important theorists of evidence include Bertrand Russell Willard Van Orman Quine the logical positivists Timothy Williamson Earl Conee and Richard Feldman 9 Russell Quine and the logical positivists belong to the empiricist tradition and hold that evidence consists in sense data stimulation of one s sensory receptors and observation statements respectively 16 According to Williamson all and only knowledge constitute evidence 17 Conee and Feldman hold that only one s current mental states should be considered evidence 11 In epistemology Edit The guiding intuition within epistemology concerning the role of evidence is that it is what justifies beliefs 8 9 For example Phoebe s auditory experience of the music justifies her belief that the speakers are on Evidence has to be possessed by the believer in order to play this role 11 So Phoebe s own experiences can justify her own beliefs but not someone else s beliefs Some philosophers hold that evidence possession is restricted to conscious mental states for example to sense data 9 This view has the implausible consequence that many of simple everyday beliefs would be unjustified The more common view is that all kinds of mental states including stored beliefs that are currently unconscious can act as evidence 11 18 It is sometimes argued that the possession of a mental state capable of justifying another is not sufficient for the justification to happen The idea behind this line of thought is that justified belief has to be connected to or grounded in the mental state acting as its evidence 11 19 So Phoebe s belief that the speakers are on is not justified by her auditory experience if the belief is not based in this experience This would be the case for example if Phoebe has both the experience and the belief but is unaware of the fact that the music is produced by the speakers It is sometimes held that only propositional mental states can play this role a position known as propositionalism 17 20 A mental state is propositional if it is an attitude directed at a propositional content Such attitudes are usually expressed by verbs like believe together with a that clause as in Robert believes that the corner shop sells milk 21 22 Such a view denies that sensory impressions can act as evidence This is often held as an argument against this view since sensory impressions are commonly treated as evidence 8 16 Propositionalism is sometimes combined with the view that only attitudes to true propositions can count as evidence 17 On this view the belief that the corner shop sells milk only constitutes evidence for the belief that the corner shop sells dairy products if the corner shop actually sells milk Against this position it has been argued that evidence can be misleading but still count as evidence 11 9 This line of thought is often combined with the idea that evidence propositional or otherwise determines what it is rational for us to believe 9 8 But it can be rational to have a false belief 23 24 This is the case when we possess misleading evidence For example it was rational for Neo in the Matrix movie to believe that he was living in the 20th century because of all the evidence supporting his belief despite the fact that this evidence was misleading since it was part of a simulated reality This account of evidence and rationality can also be extended to other doxastic attitudes like disbelief and suspension of belief So rationality does not just demand that we believe something if we have decisive evidence for it it also demands that we disbelieve something if we have decisive evidence against it and that we suspend belief if we lack decisive evidence either way 9 8 11 In phenomenology Edit The meaning of the term evidence in phenomenology shows many parallels to its epistemological usage but it is understood in a narrower sense Thus evidence here specifically refers to intuitive knowledge which is described as self given selbst gegeben 25 This contrasts with empty intentions in which one refers to states of affairs through a certain opinion but without an intuitive presentation 26 This is why evidence is often associated with the controversial thesis that it constitutes an immediate access to truth 27 In this sense the evidently given phenomenon guarantees its own truth and is therefore considered indubitable Due to this special epistemological status of evidence it is regarded in phenomenology as the basic principle of all philosophy 25 6 In this form it represents the lowest foundation of knowledge which consists of indubitable insights upon which all subsequent knowledge is built 28 This evidence based method is meant to make it possible for philosophy to overcome many of the traditionally unresolved disagreements and thus become a rigorous science 29 30 6 This far reaching claim of phenomenology based on absolute certainty is one of the focal points of criticism by its opponents Thus it has been argued that even knowledge based on self evident intuition is fallible This can be seen for example in the fact that even among phenomenologists there is much disagreement about the basic structures of experience 31 In philosophy of science Edit In the sciences evidence is understood as what confirms or disconfirms scientific hypotheses 8 9 The term confirmation is sometimes used synonymously with that of evidential support 15 Measurements of Mercury s anomalous orbit for example are seen as evidence that confirms Einstein s theory of general relativity This is especially relevant for choosing between competing theories So in the case above evidence plays the role of neutral arbiter between Newton s and Einstein s theory of gravitation 9 This is only possible if scientific evidence is public and uncontroversial so that proponents of competing scientific theories agree on what evidence is available These requirements suggest scientific evidence consists not of private mental states but of public physical objects or events 9 14 It is often held that evidence is in some sense prior to the hypotheses it confirms This was sometimes understood as temporal priority i e that we come first to possess the evidence and later form the hypothesis through induction But this temporal order is not always reflected in scientific practice where experimental researchers may look for a specific piece of evidence in order to confirm or disconfirm a pre existing hypothesis 9 Logical positivists on the other hand held that this priority is semantic in nature i e that the meanings of the theoretical terms used in the hypothesis are determined by what would count as evidence for them Counterexamples for this view come from the fact that our idea of what counts as evidence may change while the meanings of the corresponding theoretical terms remain constant 9 The most plausible view is that this priority is epistemic in nature i e that our belief in a hypothesis is justified based on the evidence while the justification for the belief in the evidence does not depend on the hypothesis 9 A central issue for the scientific conception of evidence is the problem of underdetermination i e that the evidence available supports competing theories equally well 32 33 So for example evidence from our everyday life about how gravity works confirms Newton s and Einstein s theory of gravitation equally well and is therefore unable to establish consensus among scientists But in such cases it is often the gradual accumulation of evidence that eventually leads to an emerging consensus This evidence driven process towards consensus seems to be one hallmark of the sciences not shared by other fields 9 34 Another problem for the conception of evidence in terms of confirmation of hypotheses is that what some scientists consider the evidence to be may already involve various theoretical assumptions not shared by other scientists This phenomenon is known as theory ladenness 9 35 Some cases of theory ladenness are relatively uncontroversial for example that the numbers output by a measurement device need additional assumptions about how this device works and what was measured in order to count as meaningful evidence 36 Other putative cases are more controversial for example the idea that different people or cultures perceive the world through different incommensurable conceptual schemes leading them to very different impressions about what is the case and what evidence is available 37 Theory ladenness threatens to impede the role of evidence as neutral arbiter since these additional assumptions may favor some theories over others It could thereby also undermine a consensus to emerge since the different parties may be unable to agree even on what the evidence is 9 38 When understood in the widest sense it is not controversial that some form of theory ladenness exists But it is questionable whether it constitutes a serious threat to scientific evidence when understood in this sense 9 Nature of the evidential relation EditPhilosophers in the 20th century started to investigate the evidential relation the relation between evidence and the proposition supported by it 1 The issue of the nature of the evidential relation concerns the question of what this relation has to be like in order for one thing to justify a belief or to confirm a hypothesis 15 Important theories in this field include the probabilistic approach hypothetico deductivism and the positive instance approach 8 39 Probabilistic approaches also referred to as Bayesian confirmation theory explain the evidential relation in terms of probabilities They hold that all that is necessary is that the existence of the evidence increases the likelihood that the hypothesis is true This can be expressed mathematically as P H E gt P H displaystyle P H mid E gt P H 40 41 In words a piece of evidence E confirms a hypothesis H if the conditional probability of this hypothesis relative to the evidence is higher than the unconditional probability of the hypothesis by itself 42 Smoke E for example is evidence that there is a fire H because the two usually occur together which is why the likelihood of fire given that there is smoke is higher than the likelihood of fire by itself On this view evidence is akin to an indicator or a symptom of the truth of the hypothesis 11 Against this approach it has been argued that it is too liberal because it allows accidental generalizations as evidence Finding a nickel in one s pocket for example raises the probability of the hypothesis that All the coins in my pockets are nickels But according to Alvin Goldman it should not be considered evidence for this hypothesis since there is no lawful connection between this one nickel and the other coins in the pocket 9 Hypothetico deductivism is a non probabilistic approach that characterizes the evidential relations in terms of deductive consequences of the hypothesis According to this view evidence for a hypothesis is a true observational consequence of that hypothesis 8 15 43 44 One problem with the characterization so far is that hypotheses usually contain relatively little information and therefore have few if any deductive observational consequences So the hypothesis by itself that there is a fire does not entail that smoke is observed Instead various auxiliary assumptions have to be included about the location of the smoke the fire the observer the lighting conditions the laws of chemistry etc In this way the evidential relation becomes a three place relation between evidence hypothesis and auxiliary assumptions 15 45 This means that whether a thing is evidence for a hypothesis depends on the auxiliary assumptions one holds This approach fits well with various scientific practices For example it is often the case that experimental scientists try to find evidence that would confirm or disconfirm a proposed theory The hypothetico deductive approach can be used to predict what should be observed in an experiment if the theory was true 45 It thereby explains the evidential relation between the experiment and the theory 15 One problem with this approach is that it cannot distinguish between relevant and certain irrelevant cases So if smoke is evidence for the hypothesis there is fire then it is also evidence for conjunctions including this hypothesis for example there is fire and Socrates was wise despite the fact that Socrates s wisdom is irrelevant here 8 According to the positive instance approach an observation sentence is evidence for a universal hypothesis if the sentence describes a positive instance of this hypothesis 39 46 47 For example the observation that this swan is white is an instance of the universal hypothesis that all swans are white This approach can be given a precise formulation in first order logic a proposition is evidence for a hypothesis if it entails the development of the hypothesis 8 15 Intuitively the development of the hypothesis is what the hypothesis states if it was restricted to only the individuals mentioned in the evidence In the case above we have the hypothesis x s w a n x w h i t e x displaystyle forall x swan x rightarrow white x all swans are white which when restricted to the domain a containing only the one individual mentioned in the evidence entails the evidence i e s w a n a w h i t e a displaystyle swan a land white a this swan is white 8 15 One important shortcoming of this approach is that it requires that the hypothesis and the evidence are formulated in the same vocabulary i e use the same predicates like s w a n displaystyle swan or w h i t e displaystyle white above But many scientific theories posit theoretical objects like electrons or strings in physics that are not directly observable and therefore cannot show up in the evidence as conceived here 8 15 Empirical evidence in science EditMain article Scientific evidence In scientific research evidence is accumulated through observations of phenomena that occur in the natural world or which are created as experiments in a laboratory or other controlled conditions Scientists tend to focus on how the data used during statistical inference are generated 1 Scientific evidence usually goes towards supporting or rejecting a hypothesis The burden of proof is on the person making a contentious claim Within science this translates to the burden resting on presenters of a paper in which the presenters argue for their specific findings This paper is placed before a panel of judges where the presenter must defend the thesis against all challenges When evidence is contradictory to predicted expectations the evidence and the ways of making it are often closely scrutinized see experimenter s regress and only at the end of this process is the hypothesis rejected this can be referred to as refutation of the hypothesis The rules for evidence used by science are collected systematically in an attempt to avoid the bias inherent to anecdotal evidence Law Edit The balance scales seen in depictions of Lady Justice can be seen as representing the weighing of evidence in a legal proceeding Main article Evidence law In law the production and presentation of evidence depend first on establishing on whom the burden of proof lies Admissible evidence is that which a court receives and considers for the purposes of deciding a particular case Two primary burden of proof considerations exist in law The first is on whom the burden rests In many especially Western courts the burden of proof is placed on the prosecution in criminal cases and the plaintiff in civil cases The second consideration is the degree of certitude proof must reach depending on both the quantity and quality of evidence These degrees are different for criminal and civil cases the former requiring evidence beyond a reasonable doubt the latter considering only which side has the preponderance of evidence or whether the proposition is more likely true or false The decision maker often a jury but sometimes a judge decides whether the burden of proof has been fulfilled After deciding who will carry the burden of proof the evidence is first gathered and then presented before the court Collection Edit An FBI Evidence Response Team gathering evidence by dusting an area for fingerprints In a criminal investigation rather than attempting to prove an abstract or hypothetical point the evidence gatherers attempt to determine who is responsible for a criminal act The focus of criminal evidence is to connect physical evidence and reports of witnesses to a specific person 48 Presentation Edit The path that physical evidence takes from the scene of a crime or the arrest of a suspect to the courtroom is called the chain of custody In a criminal case this path must be clearly documented or attested to by those who handled the evidence If the chain of evidence is broken a defendant may be able to persuade the judge to declare the evidence inadmissible Presenting evidence before the court differs from the gathering of evidence in important ways Gathering evidence may take many forms presenting evidence that tends to prove or disprove the point at issue is strictly governed by rules Failure to follow these rules leads to any number of consequences In law certain policies allow or require evidence to be excluded from consideration based either on indicia relating to reliability or broader social concerns Testimony which tells and exhibits which show are the two main categories of evidence presented at a trial or hearing In the United States evidence in federal court is admitted or excluded under the Federal Rules of Evidence 49 Burden of proof Edit Main articles Legal burden of proof and Philosophic burden of proof The burden of proof is the obligation of a party in an argument or dispute to provide sufficient evidence to shift the other party s or a third party s belief from their initial position The burden of proof must be fulfilled by both establishing confirming evidence and negating oppositional evidence Conclusions drawn from evidence may be subject to criticism based on a perceived failure to fulfill the burden of proof Two principal considerations are On whom does the burden of proof rest To what degree of certitude must the assertion be supported The latter question depends on the nature of the point under contention and determines the quantity and quality of evidence required to meet the burden of proof In a criminal trial in the United States for example the prosecution carries the burden of proof since the defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt Similarly in most civil procedures the plaintiff carries the burden of proof and must convince a judge or jury that the preponderance of the evidence is on their side Other legal standards of proof include reasonable suspicion probable cause as for arrest prima facie evidence credible evidence substantial evidence and clear and convincing evidence In a philosophical debate there is an implicit burden of proof on the party asserting a claim since the default position is generally one of neutrality or unbelief Each party in a debate will therefore carry the burden of proof for any assertion they make in the argument although some assertions may be granted by the other party without further evidence If the debate is set up as a resolution to be supported by one side and refuted by another the overall burden of proof is on the side supporting the resolution Specific types of evidence EditDigital evidence Personal experience Physical evidence Relationship evidence Scientific evidence Testimonial evidence Trace evidenceSee also EditArgument Belief Empiricism Evidence packaging Falsifiability Logical positivism Mathematical proof Proof truth Reason Skepticism Theory of justification Validity logic References Edit a b c Mayo Deborah G 1 September 2000 Experimental Practice and an Error Statistical Account of Evidence Philosophy of Science 67 S193 S207 doi 10 1086 392819 ISSN 0031 8248 S2CID 61281250 American College of Forensic Examiners Institute 2016 The Certified Criminal Investigator Body of Knowledge Boca Raton Florida CRC Press pp 112 113 ISBN 978 1 4987 5206 0 Sandkuhler Hans Jorg 2010 Evidenz Enzyklopadie Philosophie Meiner a b Mittelstrass Jurgen 2005 Evidenz Enzyklopadie Philosophie und Wissenschaftstheorie Metzler Rudolf Eisler Art Evidenz in Worterbuch der philosophischen Begriffe 1904 a b c Brand Gerd 1955 Der Ruckgang auf das Welterfahrende Leben Welt Ich und Zeit Nach unveroffentlichten Manuskripten Edmund Husserls in German Springer Netherlands pp 1 53 doi 10 1007 978 94 011 9616 1 1 ISBN 978 94 011 9616 1 Stenger Georg 1996 Das Phanomen der Evidenz und die Evidenz des Phanomens Phanomenologische Forschungen 1 1 84 106 ISSN 0342 8117 JSTOR 24360376 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p DiFate Victor Evidence Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 11 June 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Kelly Thomas 2016 Evidence The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 11 June 2021 Ho Hock Lai 2015 The Legal Concept of Evidence The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 11 June 2021 a b c d e f g h i Conee Earl Feldman Richard 2008 Evidence Epistemology New Essays Oxford University Press Steup Matthias Neta Ram 2020 Epistemology The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 15 June 2021 Mittag Daniel M Evidentialism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 15 June 2021 a b c Gage Logan Paul 2014 1 Introduction Two Rival Conceptions of Evidence Objectivity and Subjectivity in Epistemology A Defense of the Phenomenal Conception of Evidence PhD Thesis Baylor University a b c d e f g h i Crupi Vincenzo 2021 Confirmation The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 13 June 2021 a b Huemer Michael 2019 Sense Data The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 15 June 2021 a b c Williamson Timothy 2002 Evidence Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 019925656X 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 159867 8 Piazza Tommaso 2009 Evidentialism and the Problem of Stored Beliefs Philosophical Studies 145 2 311 324 doi 10 1007 s11098 008 9233 1 S2CID 56299607 Audi Robert 2001 The Architecture of Reason The Structure and Substance of Rationality Oxford University Press p 19 Dougherty Trent 2011 In Defense of Propositionalism about Evidence Evidentialism and its Discontents Oxford University Press pp 226 232 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199563500 003 0015 ISBN 978 0 19 172868 6 Philosophy of mind Propositional attitudes Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 19 July 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Oppy Graham Propositional attitudes www rep routledge com Archived from the original on 4 March 2021 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Audi Robert 2003 Precis of the Architecture of Reason Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 67 1 177 180 doi 10 1111 j 1933 1592 2003 tb00031 x Audi Robert The Architecture of Reason The Structure and Substance of Rationality Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Retrieved 15 June 2021 a b Husserl Edmund Cartesianische Meditationen 24 Evidenz als Selbstgegebenheit und ihre Abwandlungen www textlog de Janssen Paul Historisches Worterbuch der Philosophie online Leerintention Schwabe online Retrieved 3 October 2021 Stroker Elisabeth Historisches Worterbuch der Philosophie online Selbstgebung Selbstgegebenheit Schwabe online Retrieved 3 October 2021 Luckner Andreas 2010 Phanomenologien der Erfahrung Philosophische Rundschau 57 1 70 83 doi 10 1628 003181510791058920 Husserl Edmund 1965 Philosophie Als Strenge Wissenschaft Felix Meiner Verlag Diehl Ulrich 2005 Was Heisst Philosophie Als Strenge Wissenschaft Wege zur Politischen Philosophie Konigshausen amp Neumann 199 Noe Alva 2007 The Critique of Pure Phenomenology Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 6 1 2 231 245 doi 10 1007 s11097 006 9043 x S2CID 24597361 Stanford Kyle 2017 Underdetermination of Scientific Theory The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 15 June 2021 Philosophy of science Underdetermination Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 15 June 2021 Lee James Soo August 2017 IV Metaphysical Beliefs and Persisting Disagreement A Metaphysician s User Guide The Epistemology of Metaphysics PhD thesis Syracuse NY Syracuse University Andersen Hanne Green Sara 2013 Theory Ladenness Encyclopedia of Systems Biology Springer pp 2165 2167 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 9863 7 86 ISBN 978 1 4419 9863 7 Boyd Nora Mills Bogen James 2021 Theory and Observation in Science The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 15 June 2021 Oberheim Eric Hoyningen Huene Paul 2018 The Incommensurability of Scientific Theories 2 2 2 Conceptual replacement and theory ladenness of observation Ludwik Fleck The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 15 June 2021 Reiss Julian Sprenger Jan 2020 Scientific Objectivity The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 15 June 2021 a b Dogan Aysel 2005 Confirmation of Scientific Hypotheses as Relations Journal for General Philosophy of Science 36 2 243 259 doi 10 1007 s10838 006 1065 0 S2CID 120030170 Talbott William 2016 Bayesian Epistemology The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 14 June 2021 Franklin James 2011 The objective Bayesian conceptualisation of proof and reference class problems Sydney Law Review 33 545 561 Retrieved 30 June 2021 Huber Franz Confirmation and Induction Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 6 March 2021 hypothetico deductive method Oxford Reference Retrieved 15 June 2021 hypothetico deductive method Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 15 June 2021 a b Folde Christian 1 March 2016 Interpretation and the Hypothetico Deductive Method A Dilemma Journal of Literary Theory 10 1 58 82 doi 10 1515 jlt 2016 0003 ISSN 1862 8990 S2CID 147343629 Culler Madison 1995 Beyond Bootstrapping A New Account of Evidential Relevance Philosophy of Science 62 4 561 579 doi 10 1086 289886 S2CID 121195603 Stemmer Nathan 1981 The Objective Confirmation of Hypotheses Canadian Journal of Philosophy 11 3 395 404 doi 10 1080 00455091 1981 10716311 S2CID 148236513 Roscoe H Granger T C 1840 A Digest of the Law of Evidence in Criminal Cases p 9 Retrieved 11 March 2020 Federal Rules of Evidence 2008 Federal Evidence Review Archived from the original on 19 August 2010 Retrieved 18 July 2008 External links Edit Wikiversity has learning resources about Evaluating Evidence Look up evidence in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Evidence Wikimedia Commons has media related to Evidence Evidence at PhilPapers Zalta Edward N ed Evidence Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Evidence Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Evidence at the Indiana Philosophy Ontology Project ASTM E141 Standard Practice for Acceptance of Evidence Based on the Results of Probability Sampling Evidence Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evidence amp oldid 1143764373, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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