If I may break in: there are many contexts in which lack of evidence is evidence of lack. These are the contexts in which a piece of evidence should be observable if something existed, yet that piece of evidence is not observed. Thus the car example (if there was a car in my garage I should be able to see it, and I don't, so there is no car in my garage) and the opposing dark matter example (if there was dark matter, we don't know exactly what we would expect to see, so not seeing something doesn't necessarily mean that there is no dark matter). So they are both consistent. By the way- dark matter, as it typically defined, is used to explain a real observation (the way galaxies behave), so there is evidence for "dark matter" even though exactly how to define this entity is unclear. And people use this logic all the time (If my spouse was home I would see, hear, and feel them. I do not. Therefore they are not home).Dinwar, I've tried to be clear, but I think I'm failing
In your specific line of work, in this specific context, it is sufficient to deduce a lack of existence based on a lack of evidence.
Outside of specific contexts, however, it is NOT sufficient. It is not universally true. You cannot say "lack of evidence is evidence of lack" as a generality.
We lack evidence to support the hypothesis of dark energy. That does not imply that it does not exist. Until recently, we lacked evidence for the Higgs Boson - that did NOT mean that we had evidence that it didn't exist.
Outside of your field's use, lack of evidence cannot be used in the way you're using. It makes sense to deduce a lack of existence in your field. It does not make sense to do so in other contexts. Logic is universal, it is not context-dependent. Deductive reasoning is not universal, and is context dependent.
This thread is about logical fallacies. In order to discuss logical fallacies, we need to begin with formal logic.
Of course one must be careful that the predicted observation is indeed a correct interference (if I was blind then my prediction that I should see my spouse if they were home would be an incorrect inference). Very similarly, one must be careful that one's lack of observation is sufficient to apply to the logical inference: if I only checked the living room and kitchen of my house, then my observation is too incomplete to allow me to say that my spouse is not home.
Last edited: