You mean that the belief is the result of some amount of speculation based on scarce and subjective evidence? Such as the calculation of the probability of the existence of intelligent aliens based on very little knowledge of the conditions necessary for intelligent life to emerge?
Oh, I thought you said empirical evidence. Looking back, you did say empirical evidence! See, you can't have it both ways. Sure, there is some evidence of both beliefs, but no empirical evidence. So by what criteria are you including some non-empirical evidence and excluding other non-empirical evidence?
Why I am not giving up is beyond me. The issue here is about facts, not opinions. You are wrong, and not getting the facts here. With Claus, we were arguing opinion and perspective.
In this case you are lacking insight into a key scientific principle. Trust us (me and many other knowledgeable people in this thread) and try to understand this very important key scientific principle, what is empirical evidence. You really are experiencing a brain block here.
Life on Earth
is empirical evidence that there is intelligent life in the Universe. It's a very small sample size. That doesn't make it not empirical.
In the example I gave of something not being evidence, it was
the conclusion that was not evidence. I can verify the fact that life is empirically observed on planet Earth and that one species is relatively intelligent.
Draw whatever conclusions you want about what that implies about other intelligent life in the Universe. Most scientists would conclude from four pieces of evidence: the size of the Universe, the number of stars which we are finding that have planetary systems, the existence of life on at least one of the planets in the Universe, and the time the Universe has been in existence that there is at least some probability Earth is not unique in respect to harboring intelligent life.
No one is talking proof, certainty, or even agreeing on the actual probability other than it is greater than zero.
Having some inner sensation, an emotion, a dream, a thought, are all empirical things which can be verified.
Believing that inner sensation, emotion, dream, or thought is caused by the action of a god is not verifiable. The inner sensation, emotion, dream, or thought is empirical evidence. The belief it is god causing the inner sensation, emotion, dream, or thought is a conclusion. The evidence is not the conclusion. The conclusion is based on the evidence but it doesn't become the evidence.
You can conclude there isn't enough evidence to know if the probability of life outside of this solar system is greater than zero. I'm pretty sure you would be in the minority if you did so because
the conclusion only is about the probability of intelligent life beyond Earth, the conclusion isn't that there is life. In this case, the conclusion is not the evidence. The evidence is life exists on at least one planet.
In the god belief case, the conclusion is not the evidence. The evidence is some kind of inner brain activity. It is not verifiable that individual's conclusion is correct. I can verify what I observe on this planet. I can verify your brain activity. I cannot verify the cause you believe affects your brain activity.
I've never said either belief is unknowable. I said that the existence of intelligent life outside of our solar system is unfalsifiable, just like the existence of gods (that is, we can likely never prove that they don't exist, even if they don't). Both are knowable. We might someday discover an alien or a god (specifically, if an omnipotent god wanted us to know of its existence, it could make itself known to us).
Here again,
you do not understand what unfalsifiable means. It isn't just my opinion. Falsifiability is a scientific principle. You need to learn what it means whether you take our word for it that you don't get it or don't take our word for it. Take the time to find out. It is an important scientific concept and the definition in science isn't subject to opinion.
Falsifiable doesn't mean we do or don't know
today. It means we can or cannot ever know. Given advances in technology, we could discover life on other planets. Given advances in technology, we could not discover the hypothetical gods science has defined as outside of the natural Universe.**
(**Which is not to say we can't make a reasonable determination human god beliefs are beliefs in myths.)
I'll let someone else explain using the scientific process vs faith which is what you are asking when you ask what is and isn't skeptical. But I will add that it isn't the conclusion which makes a belief consistent with skepticism. It is what that belief is based on.