by "BIll M" <wmech@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
Mar 20, 2008 at 10:53 AM
"duke" <duckgumbo32@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:g5k4u3df4fmggm762acv9eq9vsi5kjejh6@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Wed, 19 Mar 2008 15:36:18 -0000, "BIll M" <wmech@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
>
>>>>> The evidence kicks you in the butt every day and you still refuse to
>>>>> acknowledge
>>>>> it.
>
>>>>What EVIDENCE??? Where is it??? You keep making these silly claims
>>>>without
>>>>EVER substantiating them with some objective verifiable evidence!
>
>>> That's the part you clowns don't understand. Neither "objective" nor
>>> "verifiable" are required by the definition of evidence. If you have
>>> those
>>> things, you have proof, not evidence.
>
>>> And to think people like you have NEVER figured that out all this
time.
>
>>I've given up debating with idiots.
>
> You quit talking to yourself? Come on, willie. Answer the question -
> what is
> "objective/verifiable" evidence?
I'm sorry you can't read a dictionary. I''l try to help you.
ob·jec·tive ( .b-jµk"t¹v) adj. 1. Of or having to do with a material
object.
2. Having actual existence or reality. 3. a. Uninfluenced by emotions or
personal prejudices: an objective critic. See note at fair 1 . b. Based on
observable phenomena; presented factually: an objective appraisal.
ver·i·fi·a·ble ( vµr".-fº".-b.l) adj. 1. Possible to verify: a verifiable
account of the incident; verifiable sales data. 2. Provable. ver
"i·fi"a·bil"i·ty
or ver "i·fi"a·ble·ness n. ver "i·fi"a·bly adv.
ev·i·dence ( µv"¹-d.ns) n. 1. A thing or things helpful in forming a
conclusion or judgment: The broken window was evidence that a burglary had
taken place. Scientists weigh the evidence for and against a hypothesis.
2.
Something indicative; an outward sign: evidence of grief on a mourner's
face. 3. Law The do***entary or oral statements and the material objects
admissible as testimony in a court of law
> duke, American-American
> *****
> "The Mass is the most perfect form of Prayer."
> Pope Paul VI
> *****