Jeremy,
LR wasn't having a conversation about epistemology. She was making a statement of fact.
Try reading that sentence again.
Epistemology concerns the distinction between justified belief and opinion. If someone asserts the non-existence of something to be a fact rather than just an opinion, testing that claim
is epistemology.
All statements of fact are provisional. All statements of fact are subject to the possibility of being overturned in the future. Yes it is possible that evidence will be discovered in the future that confirms the existence of God and it is possible that it has already been discovered but nobody alive knows about it but that doesn't change anything. We can't base our knowledge of the World on things we haven't discovered yet.
You’re floundering now. If it’s possible that evidence for a god (or for leprechauns) could be found then that’s a non-zero possibility event. Calling an assertion that there is no such evidence a “fact” though means that it would have to be a zero possibility event.
There’s no escaping that, however much you dance around it.
There's also the point that LR said there is no verifiable evidence of God. How would you verify something if you don't even know it exists?
That’s nonsensical. The claim was that such evidence categorically does not exist (ie, it’s a fact that it doesn’t). How you’d verify it if ever it was found has nothing to do with that.
The fact that you refuse to see the truth of my argument is, I guess, my failing, but it does not mean my argument is wrong or doesn't exist.
First, you can’t just claim “the truth of my argument” when that argument has fallen apart like a cheap suit.
Second, what
does mean that your argument is wrong or doesn’t exist is that it fails logically, not that someone can’t grasp it.
This isn't a conversation about epistemological truths, it's a conversation about a specific claim made by Little Roses.
Which is an epistemological claim – that a statement made was a fact rather than an opinion. Indeed she repeated (several times) the claim, and even put it in capitals too just in case I missed it.
It's a true claim because there is no verifiable evidence of God. If you think there is, where is it?
Non sequitur. Where it is or might be is nether here nor there – the assertion was that it doesn’t exist at all (“FACT”), which is something she cannot know to be true without knowing about and investigating every possible place that it could be, under a glacier on top of Everest included.