'evidential question' is correct and usable in written English. Evidential questions are used to ask for evidence or proof. For example: "Can you provide any evidential questions to back up your claim?".
Blair continues to deny such charges vigorously, and only the publication of Sir John Chilcot's report will resolve some of the detailed evidential questions.
If these are the context in which evidential relations are constituted, questions arise concerning how the acceptance of such assumptions can be legitimated.
Questioning the relevance of evidence presented in support of a hypothesis: Such a criticism is related to evidential criticism, yet, it questions not only data but also why certain assumptions were taken into consideration as giving evidence to a hypothesis.
Bishop raises this possibility in a discussion of "isolationist" epistemologies (such as Wittgensteinian Fideism, if such a thing exists), which attempt to segregate questions of evidential support for religious claims from the standards of a "wider, generally prevailing, evidential practice" (79).
Evidential uncertainty is where a question of fact, such as whether a claimant is a beneficiary, cannot be answered; this does not always lead to invalidity.
Popper claimed that "the objectivity of scientific statements lies in the fact that they can be inter-subjectively tested" (1934 [2002]: 22), where "intersubjectively testable" may be understood as there being verifiable facts with evidential bearing on the theory in question.
This leads Hardwig to ask two questions, one about the evidential status of testimony, and one about the nature of the knowing subject in these cases.
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