You are confusing "belief" with "faith".
No. I am not. I am talking about specific statements that were made, and the flaws in their logic.
We all have all sorts of beliefs; beliefs may be based on evidence or they may be based on faith. Faith is a belief held -without- evidence, or in the face of evidence which contradicts the belief.
Which is exactly my point: if there is already evidence for a thing, it isn't a belief. Your ignorance about it doesn't render the information less factual; it simply means you are still ignorant.
Were I to say "I believe the world is flat," you can and should say to me, "But there isn't any reason to merely believe that. There's a great deal of information about the earth that you can access. It's possible for you to know the shape of the earth, or at least know what scientists know about it."
By the same token, were I to say "I know pink invisible unicorns exist," you'd want my evidence, my proof. You'd want to see how I know this. And when I can't produce anything that even remotely resembles evidence, you can then say to me: "This is a belief. If we someday find evidence for it, we will then consider it knowledge. It may, in fact, be knowledge right now. But since we can't access it, since we remain ignorant at this time, to us it is only a belief."
One of the characteristics of critical thinking is that all conclusions are provisional. This is why scientific theories must be falsifiable in order to be considered valid theories.
A "fact" is simply a belief which happens to be validated the preponderance of physical evidence currently available. There is always the possibility, however, that additional evidence may become available which would falsify any of those particular beliefs.
That's largely correct, but I take slight exception to the statement that
all facts are merely well-verified beliefs, any or all of which could change in the future. I can think of several simple facts which would not change due to discovery of additional evidence, especially if there is no additional evidence to discover.
There are twelve inches in a standard U.S. foot. This is a simple fact.
The U.S. may choose to change its standards of measurement at some point in the future, but that is not "undiscovered evidence" that changes the length of a standard foot.
I was graduated from high school on January 18, 1977. That's a fact. There is no additional evidence to uncover that will change it.
If a person is cremated after death, pouring a glass of tap water on the ashes will not reconstitute the body and restore the person to life. This is a fact. Is there really a possiblity of undiscovered information that will render this untrue, or that could change this simple fact?
But none of this is really the point. When TA suggested another poster "toss out" his beliefs, he was urging the poster to verify his knowledge base, and stop relying on mere belief. If it is possible to know a thing, choose to know it. Find out what can be considered factual, and what must be relegated to belief. Know what you know.
I find that sound advice.