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To consider another option a viable one does not, to me anyway, imply that they are equal. Only that they both have sufficient probability to make them worth consideration. I'm sorry if you misinterpreted my remarks as making that assumption.
I agree in parts with your re-qualification of your points here. You are actually restating much of my earlier argument for me.

However, this was not the form of your original argument - and it was that which i challenged.

You claimed that if you made different assumptions an unfounded starting point makes a well-founded one untrue - it does not.
Indeed there are many starting points that are evidence to some degree in the world of science and therein lies the crucial bit - evidenced to some degree.
Dont confuse sufficient probability with equal probability and i would question that the argument the mind is separate from the brain has sufficient probability to be considered. Would you like to furnish this with some reasons and examples to establish this?
There is evidence for the other position.
Where and in what form? Is it of equal standing - or even close?
it is not solid reproducible evidence, but rather weak and anecdotal evidence.
I guessed as much. So - its not equal and not as viable and thus does not have the capacity to make the scientific stance i proposed false. Good - seems we are making progress.
Nevertheless, evidence does exist.
You just said it was weak and anecdotal..

..Ive just seen a fairy....there you go, evidence of the same calibre as that which you recruit.
I don't consider them equal because the evidence is not of the same caliber, but I do consider the evidence sufficient to make the alternative a viable option for debate.
some contradiction here - but i see what you mean. I still have not seen this evidence of which you speak that mind is separate from brain and thus a viable counter point. I note you have switched from arguing its an equal counter point to just a viable alternative for discussion. I am not arguing against this new, more mellow position.
Because you would not consider the evidence available for the alternative to be useful. It's not reproducible. It's not scientific. But it is evidence.
I and others here would consider all evidence that is offered in support of any argument,case or claim.
I disagree. Points 1 and 3 support point 4 only if you start with the assumption that mind='what the brain does". If you don't start with that assumption, then point 4 is not necessarily supported by the previous points.
Not true - what do you think is happening when selective parts of the brain are severed and selective parts of the mind die? This evidence is self-supportive
You can reason your way to a starting point. Or not. My point is that given a different starting assumptions, you cannot presume that the same evidence will lead to the same conclusions.
I have said all along that different starting assumptions can lead to differening forms of evidence, questions, results and conclusions. Different assumptions warrent different questions - this can be used to great effect in science. We certainly both agree on that one. However, this does not mean 'all' assumptions are equally viable as a starting point and all questions have equal merit. This was inherent in your earlier posts.
Your conclusions are based on and biased by your starting assumptions.
But not constrained by them. I can make quite different assumptions and arrive at the same conclusions.
By the way, you can indeed prove a negative. It's just a lot harder.
Inductive science might have something to say about that......its about probabilistic processes. Mathematics, due to its formal form of expression is perhaps the closest (but its more deductive). Other forms of science are more inductive in nature and would take issue with you on that point. However, this is all tangental to the main points we are discussing
