This doesn't falsify the statement that belief in the absence of fact is faith. (Careful here before you start substituting words again. Fact is not the same as reason or evidence.)
I never said facts were the same as reason. We reason based on facts and I have not conflated these terms. Additionally there are different types of evidence direct and circumstantial. One relies on inference, one does not
Finally it is not true that belief in the absence of fact is faith. What you are talking about is blind faith. Blind faith is faith devoid of fact or reason.
Faith can absolutely be based on fact and reason. Without realizing it you are parroting a dead atheist talking point. You sound like a hipster who took a philosophy 101 class and is trying to sound cool in front of their friends at the student union. It’s sophomoric. Maybe the compression issues you highlight are coming from you. Read the whole below article.
Dear Dr Craig, In many conversations with atheists and agnostics, they insist that
www.reasonablefaith.org
I will quote a few parts here but I suggest you read the whole article:
Question:
In many conversations with atheists and agnostics, they insist that "faith" means "belief without evidence".
Virtually every atheist I've known defines faith in that way.
It is like a axiom in the atheistic and infidel communities and it is one of the main reasons why they reject religious beliefs.
Answer form Dr. Craig (technically double Dr because he holds two doctorates):
I’m honestly surprised to learn that the attitude you describe is still prevalent among unbelievers! I thought this old canard had gone the way of the dodo. In our present generation the idea of having a reasonable faith supported by evidence seems to have much greater currency.
I guess some people never learn.
In any case, all this is irrelevant to the rationality of Christian belief. For even if we accept the secularist’s claim that faith is belief without evidence, then the proper response is, “Well, in that case my acceptance of Christianity is not by faith. For I have good reasons to think that Christianity is true.” Given his idiosyncratic definition of “faith” (belief without evidence), one is not limited to “faith” for one’s knowledge of Christianity’s truth. So ask him, what does he think of your reasons for belief?
You are trying to play a game of semantics all the while not seeing the forest through the trees