So according to your premise, one must always find evidence via verifiable evidence. To find verifiable evidence one must be able to provide this evidence so that anybody can, with enough dedication come back and check it. Sounds reasonable, but tell me, are you able to verify every piece of evidence yourself? Does every belief that you hold come from evidence that you verified?
This is why science is carried out by large numbers of people. Any one person can only ever check one relatively small area in sufficient detail. We need very large numbers of people to validate the whole of science. And we also need systems in place to ensure that the people in any one field are doing their jobs and independently checking one another's work, and not grouping together around one or a small group of ideas without sufficient evidence to do so.
Ultimately, if you're skeptical that the experts in one particular field have gotten it wrong, then it makes good sense to learn about the work these people are doing and what arguments they have developed to support their conclusions. This leads to the other important aspect of science: scientists lay their arguments bare, for all to read. Anybody can, with sufficient dedication, enter into any field and learn enough about said field to critique it. Keeping science open in this manner helps to keep it honest.
Have you verifiable evidence that the supernatural is not possible. Please provide it.
Um, that's not what I said. What I said was that
verifiable evidence is not possible when it comes to the supernatural. This is a fundamental limitation, because the supernatural is defined as being outside of nature, and you can't ever investigate something that is outside of nature.
You are pretty sure my argument is quite self-refuting? How?
This is begging the question. You claim that uniformity of nature is true, that scientists could not arrive at dependable conclusions about anything and then declare "yet they do, all the time". Begging the question.
I don't think you know what that means. Nor does it seem that you understood my argument. I'll try to break it down:
1. If there was no uniformity to nature, then nature would be unintelligible: it would not be possible to predict how nature would behave.
2. Scientists, working under the assumption of uniformity, are able to, time and again, come up with predictions that turn out to be true.
3. Point 1 demonstrates that point 2 is impossible unless the assumption of uniformity is, indeed, true. But point 2 is true, therefore the assumption of uniformity is true.
But you still haven't supported your claim that uniformity requires a god. And no, "think about it," isn't support.