But if I say I had cereal for breakfast and you ask for evidence, I think you would be satisfied by my daughter saying, "I was there, and my mum did have cereal."
What kind of evidence I need depends on the circumstances, the situation and the importance of the claim in this given situation. I´m sorry, but that´s the way I would word it.
But if I told you I could turn into a squirrel and you asked for evidence, would you be satisfied if my daughter said, "I was there, and my mum did turn into a squirrel." I doubt it. So, once again, we get to the QUALITY of the evidence.
Yes, there are undisputedly different degrees of evidence.
So then we are agreed, the video is NOT the evidence. You need to watch it and make sure that the footage contained on the video supports the claim made. The fact that there is a video is not evidence in itself.
Otherwise you could demand evidence, I could drop a VHS tape on your desk and say, here's a video, and you should accept it without watching the video. This, obviously, is a dumb way to get evidence.
Of course - not sure whom or what you are arguing against here.
Can we stop quibbling over words?
Apparently not. Look: You ask how I go about it; I answer the question; you aren´t satisfied with what I said and want me to use (and/or agree with) a different wording. So apparently, the way it is worded is very important to you (and understandably so). You do not simply agree with the way I worded it, so the difference between the way I say it and the way you say it makes an important difference (or else you would simply agree with me, instead of insisting that my wording should be replaced with yours. What we seem to be doing here is: finding out what difference it makes.
Besides, further down you say: "In a discussion like this, clear communication is vital."
And the more unbelievable the claim was, the higher the standard you would require from that evidence before you would accept it, yes?
Yes, sometimes I don´t demand any evidence, sometimes hearsay is sufficient, sometimes I would demand a video, sometimes I would even check if the video is edited, sometimes I want to see it happening in real life - and all sorts of stuff in between.
So the person making an unfalsifiable claim is the one who needs to prove that their claim is true?
Depends on what they want. One thing is clear to me, though: It´s not me who has to disprove them.
I don't recall saying they were the same...
And I didn´t say you said it. However, I was asking about the first, and in your response you replaced it by the latter.
And what point would that be?
(Most) important part of my first response and the follow up responses is to communicate that I don´t seem to have a clearly cut system that can be comprised into a set of rules or criteria.
Watching me eat the sun (or a replica of it) would not count as "extraordinary" to you?
You eating the sun would be extraordinary. The
quality of the evidence (which we seemed to agree makes the difference) is: A video that displays what is claimed. That´s not an extraordinary quality of evidence, but a pretty ordinary one.
Well, if the laws of nature are an emanation of the universe, they cannot have brought about the universe. That´s simple logic.
But aren't you excluding the options that DON'T consider a bigger frame of reference?
No, the bigger frame of reference doesn´t exclude any option. It allows for all logical possibilities.
Assuming that a watertank must itself swim in water because everything in the watertank swims in water is an unwarranted a priori limiting of the options. Allowing for the watertank to exist in different conditions than the conditions within it doesn´t exclude that it swims in water. However, if it turns out that the water swims in water, we have to let go of the idea that water is an emanation of the watertank.
In a discussion like this, clear communication is vital.
Yes.

What is unclear about "This is not what I meant?".
And if people have a belief because they were told about it repeatedly as children, then isn't that also a belief that they hold?
Sure, exactly my point. The important part is that they actually hold it. It doens´t matter how they got to hold it.
We can conclusively test whether it is true as a general principle by studying how many different people react. Get a group of people to go through an event, like your friend's holiday. Condition some of them to expect the event to be miserable, condition some of them to expect the event to be very enjoyable, and give the remainder no conditioning. If such conditioning really does create a self fulfilling prophecy, then we would expect to see that the group told it would be miserable had a generally bad time, the group told it would be enjoyable had a generally good time, and the group told nothing had a variety of different experiences. This would indicate a general principle - people's expectations of an event lead to biased opinions of how the event actually goes. And then we can say, "Well, people's expectations can lead them to have a biased opinion about a future event, leading them to interpret that event in a way that matches their preconceived notions. Thus, if your friend was absolutely convinced she would have a horrible holiday, she may have focused on the negative aspects, inflating their importance, while giving the positive aspects a much lower weight, making them seem less important in the overall experience. Thus, she most likely said she had a horrible time because she was expecting to have a horrible time."
Yes, exactly, that´s one of the options how self-fulfilling prophecies work.

The thing is: "negative", "horrible" and so forth are subjective terms. They describe a way of experiencing.
Should we talk about placebos?
Would you agree that expecting to fail is likely to increase the risk of failure (and that a test like the one you are suggesting is going to confirm that)?
Would you agree that successfully balancing on a high rope isn´t only a matter of skills but also a matter of confidence?