I said 'purported' because I can't verify their honesty and accuracy. That's part of my consideration. Anecdotes are not perfect evidence but that does not make them worthless evidence either. One person enountering a ghost can always be mistaken or correct. And further on I consider what are the chances all people claiming ghost encounters are mistaken.While I claim the preponderance of evidence can allow us to form certain positions,
We use our best judgment of what is going on in our daily lives and the world around us as part of normal human reasoning. It's a judgment on 'all things considered'. It is not a perfect science, but it is the best we got on things science can't tell us definitively. Nobody I know has no opinion on anything science can't prove or disprove. Your religion says: Atheist. Sounds like you are forming an opinion on something science can't prove or disprove, right?
Yes, I am an atheist.
I form my opinions in much the same way that you
say you do;
by judging the available information, weighing the veracity, reliability, quality of it….applying critical reasoning (I think this is where our methods begin to diverge) and determine whether or not the data is sufficient to verify the claim or proposition.
I do not give as much credence to testimony the likes of which, as you have admitted, has not been verified to be honest and/or accurate.
Particularly when similar accounts have been explicitly proven to be false.
I am convinced that much of such testimonies are believed true by those who report them.
However we know how easily people can be fooled by presuppositions individually and particularly in crowds or in solidarity with others, and fail to observe with a critical eye…..
Thus are notoriously unreliable.
As result I much more favor actual provable, reliable, repeatable, verifiable, testable, ‘evidence’ over unprovable, unreliable, unrepeatable, unverifiable, untestable ‘testimony’ and often associate ‘anecdotal’ claims of accounts similarly.
Thus I don’t consider ‘anecdotal evidence’ useless;
I do consider it to be very low quality ‘evidence’ (using the term loosely) particularly when weighed against more rigorous standards of evidence which may contradict it.
This is why I asked you, and shall again;
Do you consider ‘testimony’ to be of equal value as actual clear ‘evidence’ ( correctly using your previous definition; i.e. “the available body of ‘facts’ and information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid.)?
And if so why?