evidence | Evidence-based medicine | Evidence | Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 | Evidence (law) | Turn state's evidence | Journal of Empirical Legal Studies | Evidence (musician) | evidence (law) | Evidence (artist) | Circumstantial evidence | circumstantial evidence | UK Educational Evidence Portal | turn state's evidence | State's Evidence | state's evidence | Queen's evidence | Indian Evidence Act | Inculpatory evidence | Evidence of absence | Evidence Eliminator | Evidence-based practice | evidence-based medicine | Empirical legal studies | Empirical Bayes method | empirical algorithmics | Documentary evidence | Chapter 12: Alice's evidence. MS Eng 718.6 (12) Tenniel, John, Sir, 1820-1914. Studies for illustrations to Alice's adventures in wonderland : drawings, tracings, ca. 1864 from Houghton Library | Body of Evidence (1993 film) | Body of Evidence |
In his view, the marketplace of ideas is full of worldviews competing for the allegiance of each individual, and for some people, final allegiance to a system is due to sense experience, emotions, or political affiliation, while for others it is their particular religious tradition (Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Bahá'í Faith, etc.) or secular philosophy (empiricism, rationalism, Marxism, postmodernism, etc.).
According to research psychologist Russell Barkley, the New Age movement has yet to produce empirical evidence of the existence of indigo children, as the traits most commonly attributed to them were akin to the Forer effect (i.e., so vague they could describe nearly anyone).
The first empirical evidence for their existence was provided by Robert Darwin, the father of Charles Darwin.