I read that to assess the assumption of proportional hazards, you can compare the curves of the $ln(-ln(S(t)))$. However, the whole point of the Cox proportional hazards model is that you don't have to estimate the survival function or baseline hazard.
That said, it seems like the idea is to estimate the baseline hazard function with the Breslow estimator.
What I don't understand is why you can't just use the Kaplan-Meier estimator for the baseline hazard. And if you can, then does that mean you can use the Breslow method for a nonparametric estimator of the survival function in place of Kaplan-Meier? I'm just really confused about what the connection is between the Breslow estimator and the Cox model basically. I don't see why you need a "special" method in the Cox situation.
Or maybe I'm assuming baseline hazard (Cox) gives the same survival function as what you estimate with Kaplan-Meier in the absence of covariates, but this should be true when, for example, a Cox model has one binary covariate. Estimating the baseline hazard (covariate=0) would be the same as estimating the Kaplan-Meier curve for the covariate = 0 group, would it not?