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Evidence and proof

The English philosopher George Henry Lewes said ‘We must not assume that which is incapable
of proof.’ Certainly, proof and evidence have an important role in many areas of our lives, so it is
not surprising that there is a lot of vocabulary related to these concepts.
I will start with two nice collocations. If someone uncovers evidence, they find it, and if
they establish the truth, they work out what is really true:
Police have uncovered new evidence that links Foster to the crime.
We are trying to establish the truth about their relationship.
The most obvious area where proof is necessary is in crime and policing. Witnesses (people who
saw what happened) can help police solve a crime. We also use the word witness for someone
who says what they know about something in a court. The collocation call a witness means to
ask them to give their evidence. We sometimes refer to the formal statement of a witness as
their testimony:
Police are appealing for witnesses to the crash.
She was called as a witness when the case came to court.
It was Walker’s testimony that convicted him.
If someone has an alibi, they can prove that they were in a different place when a crime
happened. A cast-iron alibi is very strong and cannot be disproved:
He had a cast-iron alibi because he was in a TV recording studio at the time.
There are lots of useful verbs connected with proof. For
example, corroborate, confirm, verify and bear out all mean to add new proof to existing
evidence:
Fingerprints taken from the room appear to corroborate their account.
The fact that her passport is missing bears out our theory that she has gone abroad.
On the other hand, if you refute or disprove a statement or a theory, you prove that it is
incorrect, while if you discredit someone’s evidence, you make people think that it isn’t true:
They used CCTV images to refute the claim that the door was left open.
Photos of Watts with known criminals were used to discredit her evidence.
If you say that evidence you gave was untrue, you retract or withdraw it:
He later retracted his statement, saying he had been mistaken.
There are also lots of useful adjectives to describe the amount and reliability of evidence. Very
strong evidence
is robust, conclusive, definitive, irrefutable or incontrovertible. Empirical evidence is based
on real observations or experiments, while circumstantial evidence makes you think something
is true but doesn’t prove it and anecdotal evidence is based on someone’s experience rather than
on facts that can be checked:
We need robust evidence about pollution levels.
The police can’t convict him on circumstantial evidence.
There’s lots of anecdotal evidence about the lack of school places.

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