I disagree. Evidence is essentially data.
Yes, evidence is data, but an object unobserved is not data, it is just an object.
This is data:
da·ta
pl.n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb)
1. Factual information, especially information organized for analysis or used to reason or make decisions.
2. Computer Science. Numerical or other information represented in a form suitable for processing by computer.
3. Values derived from scientific experiments.
4. Plural of datum (sense 1).
These are all kinds of information, not objects.
This is information:
in·for·ma·tion
n.
1. Knowledge derived from study, experience, or instruction.
2. Knowledge of specific events or situations that has been gathered or received by communication; intelligence or news. See synonyms at knowledge.
3. A collection of facts or data: statistical information.
4. The act of informing or the condition of being informed; communication of knowledge: Safety instructions are provided for the information of our passengers.
5. Computer Science. Processed, stored, or transmitted data.
6. A numerical measure of the uncertainty of an experimental outcome.
7. Law. A formal accusation of a crime made by a public officer rather than by grand jury indictment.
Every single one of those senses (excepting the last, strictly legal case) has to do with observation or manipulation of perceptions, not inherent qualities of objects.
The objective and correct meaning of that data is independent of the human mind or of any mind.
There is no meaning without a human mind, let alone an "objective and correct" one.
mean·ing
n.
Something that is conveyed or signified; sense or significance.
Something that one wishes to convey, especially by language: The writer's meaning was obscured by his convoluted prose.
An interpreted goal, intent, or end: “The central meaning of his pontificate is to restore papal authority” (Conor Cruise O'Brien).
Inner significance: “But who can comprehend the meaning of the voice of the city?” (O. Henry).
You are confusing data with facts. Facts are discovered after data has been evaluated, checked, tested, repeated, replicated, etc. until they can be judged evidence, and that evidence combined with other similarly tested and vetted evidence.
How do you tell what is correct from what is incorrect? Evidence.
Wrong, with repeatability, replicability, etc.
With luck and work, humans will interpret the evidence correctly. If not, they will be wrong.
I'd rather like to think the scientific method was more reliable than effort and a bit of luck. You make discovery sound like an Horatio Alger story.
The evidence is still there.
But it isn't the object. A bone just sitting there in the dirt isn't evidence. A bone that is measured to be 14 m.y.o. is data, which, when checked against other bones or retested to check against measuring (perception) error, becomes evidence.
This is not the same as beauty, which, by definition, is totally subjective.
So are perceptions, which is why science has the built in error checking. If evidence were objective and an inherent property of an object, there wouldn't be any dispute over what it represented.
It isn't. The absence of evidence is "no evidence". You're falling into the intellectual trap that ID proponents set. They feel that if they can show that if evidence doesn't exist, or is faulty, then it is evidence FOR their claim. And that is wrong.
So it is. Which is why I didn't say "absence of evidence". I said absence of a thing is evidence. The phlogiston that should have permeated every centimetre of interstellar space wasn't there. That's evidence that phogiston doesn't exist- or is there some "anti-phlogiston" to bear this "objective, inherent evidence"?
What is human is the interpretation of the evidence. Certainly, evidence can be interpreted wrongly. We don't have perfect objectivity. But our lack of observational skills doesn't change what the data truly means to that idealized concept of a perfectly objective observer.
Now we're inventing extraneous entities beyond necessity?
Idealized entities? Put down the Plato and step away from the keyboard.

Cut out "objectivity" except as a verified, factual conclusion from properly vetted evidence derived from thouroughly tested observational data and there's no reason to go running for some preposterous "ideal" entity for validation.
Sorry, I was trying to be all literary again. Actually, "having" in the sense I used it, is a gerund, as in "skiing is fun". That makes it technically a noun.
I never trusted those damn gerunds. Sneaky bastards.
The "having" or the "perception" is the thing you are calling evidence.
Not quite. There are a couple of steps from "perception" to "evidence". Important, scientific steps. To just declare that perception was evidence would be as unwarranted as saying an unobserved object was. Respectfully.
Actually, you're not. You were a hungry person before. Now you're a satiated person.
Dude, you've met me, I've never been satiated.
Sorry if I'm duplicating.
Oh, that's fine. I
love copy-and-pasting...
I don't want to read a long thread elsewhere. I want to TALK, dammit!
So, how was the ren faire? My family went to the one out here, but I was having a "Captain Tripps" weekend with the flu.