We all have beliefs, some we care about more than others, and we look forward recurring patterns of these beliefs (possibly shared with others) that we might call evidence or some confirmation. But beliefs change as does evidence as we evolve. — Rich
Daniel Dennet says humans will change the way how we believe.
Is evidence caring about belief? If so, can evidence exist without belief? — uncool
The status of evidence as such must be concluded, otherwise it is not evidence, and if conclusions are required then knowledge is required and if knowledge is required then belief is required. — Cavacava
I don't think so, because I know many Christians who believe world was made in 6 days, and those beliefs disagree with science evidence. We can maybe then say scientific evidence doesn't care about beliefs?
Yes people can believe what ever they want to believe, but that does not make those beliefs knowledge. Knowledge as true belief implies the ability to demonstrate with evidence that a belief is rationally coherent, even if it can't be proven absolutely true. — Cavacava
Exactly. This makes me think beliefs are not necessary, because we can ignore beliefs that don't deal with evidence, and also, we can ignore beliefs that deal with evidence.
We could ignore evidenced based beliefs, because those are redundant, as the evidence doesn't care whether or not people believe in it.
You speak of evidence as if it were a simple thing, yet I think that evidence is the result of beliefs — Cavacava
a=b is meaningless if no one believes a=b. — Cavacava
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