The dominant intellectual posture of the modern era treats physicalism — the view that physical causation is the complete and essentially closed account of all phenomena — as the default position requiring no defense, while demanding that any non-physicalist claim clear an ever-rising evidential bar before it can be taken seriously. This paper argues that this asymmetric burden of proof is unjustified, historically unsupported, and strategically motivated rather than epistemically principled. Physicalism makes at least three substantive positive claims that each carry a heavy burden of proof: (1) the Principle of Sufficient Reason (PSR) applies universally and physical causation is closed; (2) all apparently anomalous phenomena — including the extensive literature on PSI, near-death experiences, consciousness, and non-local correlations — can be fully explained within the physical framework or dismissed as error; and (3) physics is essentially complete and all that remains is filling in gaps. Each of these claims is not a modest default — each is a strong positive assertion that requires positive evidence. Claim (1) was addressed in URB #460: PSR is indefensible at the foundation, and quantum mechanics has empirically falsified physical causal closure. Claim (2) is pragmatically impossible to sustain: the accumulated literature of anomalous phenomena is too large to rationally dismiss in its entirety without engaging each case on its merits — yet systematic engagement is absent. Physicalists resort to denial because rational refutation is impossible at scale. Claim (3) is not merely unsupported by evidence but is falsified by the history of science itself: the claim that physics is essentially complete has been made at least three times in recorded history and has been proven catastrophically wrong each time, followed by revolutions that opened entirely new conceptual territories. The paper also introduces two Tralse examples that illuminate the framework's power: indeterminism is *Tralsely rational* — simultaneously irrational (violates PSR locally) and rational (enables the meaning that rationality serves); and black is *Tralsely a color* — simultaneously an absence of color (no wavelength) and the foundational distinction that makes color comparison possible. Both cases show that the either/or demand physicalism imposes is the error. The conclusion is a demand for symmetry: non-physicalists need not perpetually defend. Physicalists must now show their evidence.
Brandon Charles Emerick (Tue,) studied this question.