Feel free to change the wording so it suits your position better.
Well, Kylie, I have been trying to explain my position in my own words. Then you asked if one could paraphrase it with "extraordinary" being the keyword, and I responded "No, doesn´t work for me.". I think it´s unnecessarily complicated to work my way back to my position from your way of paraphrasing it - would you agree?
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But if the thing you ask to see as evidence is itself an extraordinary event, then wouldn't it count as extraordinary evidence? (Please feel free to substitute a word for "extraordinary" if you would prefer a different one)
I don´t think so. The sort of evidence would still be the same (e.g. "I want a video" - there´s nothing extraordinary about a video).
I would want the same sort of evidence no matter what - it´s just that I am sometimes more inclined to ask about getting evidence, and sometimes I am more generous (or indifferent).
Of course. But why is that? I would suggest there are two reasons why you could accept such a claim with zero evidence. Firstly, eating cereal for breakfast is extremely common. Lots of people do it. eating cereal for breakfast is a very plausible claim. Secondly, it doesn't challenge your worldview.
As I said already, I can hear the same claim ("I had cereals for breakfast"), but - depending on the circumstances - sometimes demand evidence or even conclusive evidence or not.
Say, there was a box of cereals and a bar of chocolate in our household, you tell me you ate ceareals - but the cereal box is still unopened but the chocolate is gone...
Or, what you ate for breakfast is crucial for your alibi in a murder case...
Or, you have a gluten intolerance, you tell me you ate cereal for breakfast, but you don´t have any symptoms....
However, if I claimed I ate the sun for breakfast, would you accept it so easily? I doubt it.
To be honest, I probably wouldn´t accept it at all. I wouldn´t even ask for evidence. I would take you straight to the doctors.
But in case I would want evidence, the evidence wouldn´t anything special or extraordinary (e.g. "I want to see a video of it.").
However, the thing is: The sun is still there. You haven´t eaten it. I know that any evidence you will come up with must be fake.
First of all, it's not plausible. No one has ever eaten the sun before, and the idea of a person eating the sun violates many laws of nature. There's no way for me to get to the sun, and even if I could, the temperature would fry me to a crisp before I got anywhere close. And even if I could survive that, the sun is simply way to massive for a single person to eat it.
So what sort of evidence would you demand from me in order to accept my claim that I have eaten the sun?
Secondly, it would require a change in your worldview. It would require you to be convinced that I had destroyed the sun and replaced it with an exact duplicate.
Ah, so in the meantime you have already added more to the story, and on top have made your claim unfalsifiable.

But let´s get back to your "extraordinary evidence" category: Again, what would be the extraordinary evidence I had to bring to the table in order to convince you that I have eaten the sun and replaced it by a duplicate?
So, there is a lot more telling you that my claim is wrong if I claim I ate the sun for breakfast. There is little to nothing telling you my claim is wrong if I said I had cereal instead.
This isn´t even in dispute. I am wondering how the category "extraordinary evidence" helps here, though.
It´s all a matter of "frames of reference". Everything within the universe can possibly be explained by the forces at work within the universe. However, if someone starts asking "(How) did the laws of physics come into being", it would be absurd (a category error) to try to explain that by means of the laws of physics. We would have to widen the frame of reference.
Wouldn't it be easy to test for self fulfilling prophecies? Just give someone a prophecy that they can take action to accomplish. Then see if that group of people accomplishes those prophecies more than a control group who has prophecies made about them, but they AREN'T told.
I think we have a misunderstanding here.
I haven´t been talking about tasks to accomplish, in the first place.
Secondly, I was talking about beliefs that people actually hold (not about beliefs that they are told to accept).
Two weeks ago, a friend of mine went to Ireland for vacation. She knew in advance that it would be terrible, and that everything would go wrong. It didn´t surprise me at all that this came true for her.
