The "fallacy" bullshit truly is getting old, mostly because you are overdoing it. Get away from it.
No.
Anyway...earlier, I insisted that one CAN prove a negative...and mentioned that the scope of the negative mattered. You dismissed the notion that the scope matters (which seems incredible considering your supposed expertise)...but never responded to the question I asked:
Scope doesn't matter. Form of argument does.
Is "There are no gods" a negative? If I could prove that there are no gods...would I be proving a negative?
Mind answering that!
Sure. The phrase "there are no gods" is a positive. It is a definitive statement. If you use it as a predicate, it would be a positive predicate. Used as a conclusion it is a positive conclusion.
Attempting to use it as a predicate will likely result in challenges, since the statement itself as a conclusion is not possible. The reason it is not possible is because the only predicates available are negative ones. The same is true of the statement "there are gods". It is not possible to prove a positive with negative predicates.
I challenged you on the positive statement "there is no evidence" because that is likewise a positive statement, and you were using it as a conclusion. It is an invalid conclusion because you were basing that conclusion on a circular argument. Supporting evidence DOES exist for both cases. ALL of it is negative statements or circular arguments in their own right. Because of that, NONE of it can be used to form the positive conclusion "there is a god" or "there is no god". Such a conclusion is also therefore a circular argument, and the argument of ignorance fallacy.
This brings up the question: What is a negative statement? What is a positive statement?
A positive statement is one that is definitive and specific. A negative statement is everything else. Thus, "there is no god" is a positive statement. It is definitive. It is specific. It also happens to be a circular argument, but that in and of itself is not a fallacy. The same is true of the statement "there is a god".
The statement "there is no evidence", however, is a negative statement. It is NOT definitive. It is NOT specific. It attempts to declare a non-void set as void. The only way this can be a positive statement is if the set can be proven void. No such proof was given.
The supporting evidence I listed for both cases, such as "life itself" is a negative statement. It is not definitive. It is not specific. It is an set of an unknown number of elements which makes the set too generic to be specific.