 So this very quickly leads to the question then well then what counts as sufficient evidence for Clifford? Okay, so There's conditions upon which you can believe somebody else and the condition and those conditions are you know kind of simply When they're being honest, they're trying to tell the truth and they have sufficient evidence Now that just kind of backs the question up, right? So then what counts as sufficient evidence? Well, you have to have two conditions Your belief has to conform to the uniformity of nature And that's the first one the second one is that it has to conform to the common human experience Now the uniformity of nature is you know, not just that it's green and lush trees and the like the idea is that if this belief is true Then this belief is true and all relevant in some of their circumstances. Okay, so Yeah, and you're not entitled to that belief if somehow the belief changes in other circumstances or it's not true in other circumstances or right There has to be This consistency in your beliefs right Be it the beliefs be be about the earth or mathematics or whatever, right? So if you believe And this set of circumstances that you know if you drop a ball it will bounce and the bounces will decrease and they will roll away Well, then you you're not entitled to the belief and oh, but by the way Sometimes they're just gonna start bouncing all on its own and float for a little while and then fly away No, you know Clifford says no, you know, you're not entitled to that belief Not that second one if you if you know, maybe you believe either one, right? If you believe one, you can't just believe the other The belief has to conform to the uniformity of nature if the belief is true and these circumstances is true and all relatively similar circumstances All right So that's that's one the other condition is that it has to conform to the common human experience Now that means that you're given the same evidence give it the same opportunity to investigate the belief or You know given the conditions of the evidence for the belief that that most if not all people would also Ascent to the belief Right. They have to agree with you. So the ball bounces or decreases the bouncer rolls away People say, aha. Yeah, I believe in that right then that that given this evidence. That's that's true You know, if you say well, yeah, I think it's just gonna start bouncing on its own and fly away Well, if they don't agree with that right then You know, even if you have the uniformity of nature so to speak you don't get that you don't have the Common human experience. So these are the two conditions to conditions your belief has to conform to the uniformity nature of this one The second one is that Has to conform to the common human experience most if not all people would agree with the belief given the same evidence