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Falsifiability

Falsifiability is a deductive standard of evaluation of scientific theories and hypotheses, introduced by the philosopher of science Karl Popper in his book The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1934).[B] A theory or hypothesis is falsifiable (or refutable) if it can be logically contradicted by an empirical test.

"All swans are white" is falsifiable, and would be falsifiable even if there were no black swan to actually falsify it, as it is clear what would be needed to disprove that statement.[A]

Popper proposed falsifiability as the cornerstone solution to both the problem of induction and the problem of demarcation. He insisted that, as a logical criterion, his falsifiability is distinct from the related concept "capacity to be proven wrong" discussed in Lakatos's falsificationism.[C][D][E] Even being a logical criterion, its purpose is to make the theory predictive and testable, and thus useful in practice.

Popper contrasted falsifiability to the intuitively similar concept of verifiability that was then current in logical positivism. He argues that the only way to verify a claim such as "All swans are white" would be if one could theoretically observe all swans,[F] which is not possible. Instead, falsifiability searches for the anomalous instance, such that observing a single black swan is theoretically reasonable and sufficient to logically falsify the claim. On the other hand, the Duhem–Quine thesis says that definitive experimental falsifications are impossible[1] and that no scientific hypothesis is by itself capable of making predictions, because an empirical test of the hypothesis requires one or more background assumptions.[2]

According to Popper there is a clean asymmetry on the logical side[G] and falsifiability does not have the Duhem problem[H] because it is a logical criterion. Experimental research has the Duhem problem and other problems, such as induction,[I] but, according to Popper, statistical tests, which are only possible when a theory is falsifiable, can still be useful within a critical discussion. Philosophers such as Deborah Mayo consider that Popper "comes up short" in his description of the scientific role of statistical and data models.[3]

As a key notion in the separation of science from non-science and pseudoscience, falsifiability has featured prominently in many scientific controversies and applications, even being used as legal precedent.

The problem of induction and demarcation edit

One of the questions in the scientific method is: how does one move from observations to scientific laws? This is the problem of induction. Suppose we want to put the hypothesis that all swans are white to the test. We come across a white swan. We cannot validly argue (or induce) from "here is a white swan" to "all swans are white"; doing so would require a logical fallacy such as, for example, affirming the consequent.[4]

Popper's idea to solve this problem is that while it is impossible to verify that every swan is white, finding a single black swan shows that not every swan is white. We might tentatively accept the proposal that every swan is white, while looking out for examples of non-white swans that would show our conjecture to be false. Falsification uses the valid inference modus tollens: if from a law   we logically deduce  , but what is observed is  , we infer that the law   is false. For example, given the statement   "all swans are white", we can deduce   "the specific swan here is white", but if what is observed is   "the specific swan here is not white" (say black), then "all swans are white" is false. More accurately, the statement   that can be deduced is broken into an initial condition and a prediction as in   in which   "the thing here is a swan" and   "the thing here is a white swan". If what is observed is C being true while P is false (formally,  ), we can infer that the law is false.

For Popper, induction is actually never needed in science.[J][K] Instead, in Popper's view, laws are conjectured in a non-logical manner on the basis of expectations and predispositions.[5] This has led David Miller, a student and collaborator of Popper, to write "the mission is to classify truths, not to certify them".[6] In contrast, the logical empiricism movement, which included such philosophers as Moritz Schlick, Rudolf Carnap, Otto Neurath, and A.J. Ayer wanted to formalize the idea that, for a law to be scientific, it must be possible to argue on the basis of observations either in favor of its truth or its falsity. There was no consensus among these philosophers about how to achieve that, but the thought expressed by Mach's dictum that "where neither confirmation nor refutation is possible, science is not concerned" was accepted as a basic precept of critical reflection about science.[7][8][9]

Popper said that a demarcation criterion was possible, but we have to use the logical possibility of falsifications, which is falsifiability. He cited his encounter with psychoanalysis in the 1910s. It did not matter what observation was presented, psychoanalysis could explain it. Unfortunately, the reason it could explain everything is that it did not exclude anything also.[L] For Popper, this was a failure, because it meant that it could not make any prediction. From a logical standpoint, if one finds an observation that does not contradict a law, it does not mean that the law is true. A verification has no value in itself. But, if the law makes risky predictions and these are corroborated, Popper says, there is a reason to prefer this law over another law that makes less risky predictions or no predictions at all.[M][N] In the definition of falsifiability, contradictions with observations are not used to support eventual falsifications, but for logical "falsifications" that show that the law makes risky predictions, which is completely different.

On the basic philosophical side of this issue, Popper said that some philosophers of the Vienna Circle had mixed two different problems, that of meaning and that of demarcation, and had proposed in verificationism a single solution to both: a statement that could not be verified was considered meaningless. In opposition to this view, Popper said that there are meaningful theories that are not scientific, and that, accordingly, a criterion of meaningfulness does not coincide with a criterion of demarcation.[O]

From Hume's problem to non problematic induction edit

The problem of induction is often called Hume's problem. David Hume studied how human beings obtain new knowledge that goes beyond known laws and observations, including how we can discover new laws. He understood that deductive logic could not explain this learning process and argued in favour of a mental or psychological process of learning that would not require deductive logic. He even argued that this learning process cannot be justified by any general rules, deductive or not.[10] Popper accepted Hume's argument and therefore viewed progress in science as the result of quasi-induction, which does the same as induction, but has no inference rules to justify it.[11][12] Philip N. Johnson-Laird, professor of psychology, also accepted Hume's conclusion that induction has no justification. For him induction does not require justification and therefore can exist in the same manner as Popper's quasi-induction does.[13]

When Johnson-Laird says that no justification is needed, he does not refer to a general method of justification that, to avoid a circular reasoning, would not itself require any justification. On the contrary, in agreement with Hume, he refers to the fact that there is no general method of justification for induction and that's ok, because the induction steps do not require justification.[13] Instead, these steps use patterns of induction that may or may not be applicable depending on the background knowledge. Johnson-Laird wrote: "[P]hilosophers have worried about which properties of objects warrant inductive inferences. The answer rests on knowledge: we don't infer that all the passengers on a plane are male because the first ten off the plane are men. We know that this observation doesn't rule out the possibility of a woman passenger."[13] The reasoning pattern that was not applied here is enumerative induction.

Popper was interested in the overall learning process in science, to quasi-induction, which he also called the "path of science".[11] However, Popper did not show much interest in these reasoning patterns, which he globally referred to as psychologism.[14] He did not deny the possibility of some kind of psychological explanation for the learning process, especially when psychology is seen as an extension of biology, but he felt that these biological explanations were not within the scope of epistemology.[P][Q] Popper proposed an evolutionary mechanism to explain the success of science,[15] which is much in line with Johnson-Laird's view that "induction is just something that animals, including human beings, do to make life possible",[13] but Popper did not consider it a part of his epistemology.[16] He wrote that his interest was mainly in the logic of science and that epistemology should be concerned with logical aspects only.[R] Instead of asking why science succeeds he considered the pragmatic problem of induction.[17] This problem is not how to justify a theory or what is the global mechanism for the success of science but only what methodology do we use to pick one theory among theories that are already conjectured. His methodological answer to the latter question is that we pick the theory that is the most tested with the available technology: "the one, which in the light of our critical discussion, appears to be the best so far".[17] By his own account, because only a negative approach was supported by logic, Popper adopted a negative methodology.[S] The purpose of his methodology is to prevent "the policy of immunizing our theories against refutation". It also supports some "dogmatic attitude" in defending theories against criticism, because this allows the process to be more complete.[18] This negative view of science was much criticized and not only by Johnson-Laird.

In practice, some steps based on observations can be justified under assumptions, which can be very natural. For example, Bayesian inductive logic[19] is justified by theorems that make explicit assumptions. These theorems are obtained with deductive logic, not inductive logic. They are sometimes presented as steps of induction, because they refer to laws of probability, even though they do not go beyond deductive logic. This is yet a third notion of induction, which overlap with deductive logic in the following sense that it is supported by it. These deductive steps are not really inductive, but the overall process that includes the creation of assumptions is inductive in the usual sense. In a fallibilism perspective, a perspective that is widely accepted by philosophers, including Popper, every learning step only creates or reinforces an assumption—that is all what science does.

Basic statements and the definition of falsifiability edit

Popper distinguished between the logic of science and its applied methodology.[C] For example, Newton's law of gravitation is falsifiable—it is falsified by "The brick fell upwards when released".[20][T] An explanation for this imaginary state of affairs[A] such as some hidden force other than gravity acting on the brick would make it more intuitive,[U] but is not needed for falsifiability, because it is a logical criterion. The empirical requirement on the potential falsifier, also called the material requirement,[V] is only that it is observable inter-subjectively with existing technologies. The logical part consists of theories, statements and their purely logical relationship together with this material requirement, which is needed for a connection with the methodological part.

The methodological part consists, in Popper's view, of informal rules, which are used to guess theories, accept observation statements as factual, etc. These include statistical tests: Popper is aware that observation statements are accepted with the help of statistical methods and that these involve methodological decisions.[21] When this distinction is applied to the term "falsifiability", it corresponds to a distinction between two completely different meanings of the term. The same is true for the term "falsifiable". Popper said that he only uses "falsifiability" or "falsifiable" in reference to the logical side and that, when he refers to the methodological side, he speaks instead of "falsification" and its problems.[D]

Popper said that methodological problems require proposing methodological rules. For example, one such rule is that, if one refuses to go along with falsifications, then one has retired oneself from the game of science.[22] The logical side does not have such methodological problems, in particular with regard to the falsifiability of a theory, because basic statements are not required to be possible. Methodological rules are only needed in the context of actual falsifications.

So observations have two purposes in Popper's view. On the methodological side, observations can be used to show that a law is false, which Popper calls falsification. On the logical side, observations, which are purely logical constructions, do not show a law to be false, but contradict a law to show its falsifiability. Unlike falsifications and free from the problems of falsification, these contradictions establish the value of the law, which may eventually be corroborated. He wrote that an entire literature exists because this distinction was not observed.[E]

Basic statements edit

In Popper's view of science, statements of observation can be analyzed within a logical structure independently of any factual observations.[W][X] The set of all purely logical observations that are considered constitutes the empirical basis. Popper calls them the basic statements or test statements. They are the statements that can be used to show the falsifiability of a theory. Popper says that basic statements do not have to be possible in practice. It is sufficient that they are accepted by convention as belonging to the empirical language, a language that allows intersubjective verifiability: "they must be testable by intersubjective observation (the material requirement)".[23][Y] See the examples in section § Examples of demarcation and applications.

In more than twelve pages of The Logic of Scientific Discovery,[24] Popper discusses informally which statements among those that are considered in the logical structure are basic statements. A logical structure uses universal classes to define laws. For example, in the law "all swans are white" the concept of swans is a universal class. It corresponds to a set of properties that every swan must have. It is not restricted to the swans that exist, existed or will exist. Informally, a basic statement is simply a statement that concerns only a finite number of specific instances in universal classes. In particular, an existential statement such as "there exists a black swan" is not a basic statement, because it is not specific about the instance. On the other hand, "this swan here is black" is a basic statement. Popper says that it is a singular existential statement or simply a singular statement. So, basic statements are singular (existential) statements.

The definition of falsifiability edit

Thornton says that basic statements are statements that correspond to particular "observation-reports". He then gives Popper's definition of falsifiability:

"A theory is scientific if and only if it divides the class of basic statements into the following two non-empty sub-classes: (a) the class of all those basic statements with which it is inconsistent, or which it prohibits—this is the class of its potential falsifiers (i.e., those statements which, if true, falsify the whole theory), and (b) the class of those basic statements with which it is consistent, or which it permits (i.e., those statements which, if true, corroborate it, or bear it out)."

— Thornton, Stephen, Thornton 2016, at the end of section 3

As in the case of actual falsifiers, decisions must be taken by scientists to accept a logical structure and its associated empirical basis, but these are usually part of a background knowledge that scientists have in common and, often, no discussion is even necessary.[Z] The first decision described by Lakatos[25] is implicit in this agreement, but the other decisions are not needed. This agreement, if one can speak of agreement when there is not even a discussion, exists only in principle. This is where the distinction between the logical and methodological sides of science becomes important. When an actual falsifier is proposed, the technology used is considered in detail and, as described in section § Dogmatic falsificationism, an actual agreement is needed. This may require using a deeper empirical basis,[AA] hidden within the current empirical basis, to make sure that the properties or values used in the falsifier were obtained correctly (Andersson 2016 gives some examples).

Popper says that despite the fact that the empirical basis can be shaky, more comparable to a swamp than to solid ground,[AA] the definition that is given above is simply the formalization of a natural requirement on scientific theories, without which the whole logical process of science[W] would not be possible.

Initial condition and prediction in falsifiers of laws edit

In his analysis of the scientific nature of universal laws, Popper arrived at the conclusion that laws must "allow us to deduce, roughly speaking, more empirical singular statements than we can deduce from the initial conditions alone."[26] A singular statement that has one part only cannot contradict a universal law. A falsifier of a law has always two parts: the initial condition and the singular statement that contradicts the prediction.

However, there is no need to require that falsifiers have two parts in the definition itself. This removes the requirement that a falsifiable statement must make prediction. In this way, the definition is more general and allows the basic statements themselves to be falsifiable.[26] Criteria that require that a law must be predictive, just as is required by falsifiability (when applied to laws), Popper wrote, "have been put forward as criteria of the meaningfulness of sentences (rather than as criteria of demarcation applicable to theoretical systems) again and again after the publication of my book, even by critics who pooh-poohed my criterion of falsifiability."[27]

Falsifiability in model theory edit

Scientists such as the Nobel laureate Herbert A. Simon have studied the semantic aspects of the logical side of falsifiability.[28][29] These studies were done in the perspective that a logic is a relation between formal sentences in languages and a collection of mathematical structures. The relation, usually denoted  , says the formal sentence   is true when interpreted in the structure  —it provides the semantic of the languages.[AB] According to Rynasiewicz, in this semantic perspective, falsifiability as defined by Popper means that in some observation structure (in the collection) there exists a set of observations which refutes the theory.[30] An even stronger notion of falsifiability was considered, which requires, not only that there exists one structure with a contradicting set of observations, but also that all structures in the collection that cannot be expanded to a structure that satisfies   contain such a contradicting set of observations.[30]

Examples of demarcation and applications edit

Newton's theory edit

In response to Lakatos who suggested that Newton's theory was as hard to show falsifiable as Freud's psychoanalytic theory, Popper gave the example of an apple that moves from the ground up to a branch and then starts to dance from one branch to another.[T] It is clearly impossible, yet a basic statement that is a valid potential falsifier for Newton's theory, because the position of the apple at different times can be measured.

Einstein's equivalence principle edit

Another example of a basic statement is "The inert mass of this object is ten times larger than its gravitational mass." This is a basic statement because the inert mass and the gravitational mass can both be measured separately, even though it never happens that they are different. It is, as described by Popper, a valid falsifier for Einstein's equivalence principle.[AC]

Evolution edit

Industrial melanism edit

 
A black-bodied and white-bodied peppered moth

In a discussion of the theory of evolution, Popper mentioned industrial melanism[31] as an example of a falsifiable law. A corresponding basic statement that acts as a potential falsifier is "In this industrial area, the relative fitness of the white-bodied peppered moth is high." Here "fitness" means "reproductive success over the next generation".[AD][AE] It is a basic statement, because it is possible to separately determine the kind of environment, industrial vs natural, and the relative fitness of the white-bodied form (relative to the black-bodied form) in an area, even though it never happens that the white-bodied form has a high relative fitness in an industrial area.

Precambrian rabbit edit

A famous example of a basic statement from J. B. S. Haldane is "[These are] fossil rabbits in the Precambrian era." This is a basic statement because it is possible to find a fossil rabbit and to determine that the date of a fossil is in the Precambrian era, even though it never happens that the date of a rabbit fossil is in the Precambrian era. Despite opinions to the contrary,[32] sometimes wrongly attributed to Popper,[AF] this shows the scientific character of paleontology or the history of the evolution of life on Earth, because it contradicts the hypothesis in paleontology that all mammals existed in a much more recent era. Richard Dawkins adds that any other modern animal, such as a hippo, would suffice.[33][34][35]

Simple examples of unfalsifiable statements edit

 
 
Even if it is accepted that angels exist, "All angels have large wings" is not falsifiable, because no technology exists to identify and observe angels.

A simple example of a non-basic statement is "This angel does not have large wings." It is not a basic statement, because though the absence of large wings can be observed, no technology (independent of the presence of wings[AG]) exists to identify angels. Even if it is accepted that angels exist, the sentence "All angels have large wings" is not falsifiable.

Another example from Popper of a non-basic statement is "This human action is altruistic." It is not a basic statement, because no accepted technology allows us to determine whether or not an action is motivated by self-interest. Because no basic statement falsifies it, the statement that "All human actions are egotistic, motivated by self-interest" is thus not falsifiable.[AH]

Omphalos hypothesis edit

Some adherents of young-Earth creationism make an argument (called the Omphalos hypothesis after the Greek word for navel) that the world was created with the appearance of age; e.g., the sudden appearance of a mature chicken capable of laying eggs. This ad hoc hypothesis introduced into young-Earth creationism is unfalsifiable because it says that the time of creation (of a species) measured by the accepted technology is illusory and no accepted technology is proposed to measure the claimed "actual" time of creation. Moreover, if the ad hoc hypothesis says that the world was created as we observe it today without stating further laws, by definition it cannot be contradicted by observations and thus is not falsifiable. This is discussed by Dienes in the case of a variation on the Omphalos hypothesis, which, in addition, specifies that God made the creation in this way to test our faith.[36]

Useful metaphysical statements edit

Grover Maxwell [es] discussed statements such as "All men are mortal."[37] This is not falsifiable, because it does not matter how old a man is, maybe he will die next year.[38] Maxwell said that this statement is nevertheless useful, because it is often corroborated. He coined the term "corroboration without demarcation". Popper's view is that it is indeed useful, because Popper considers that metaphysical statements can be useful, but also because it is indirectly corroborated by the corroboration of the falsifiable law "All men die before the age of 150." For Popper, if no such falsifiable law exists, then the metaphysical law is less useful, because it is not indirectly corroborated.[AI] This kind of non-falsifiable statements in science was noticed by Carnap as early as 1937.[39]

 
Clyde Cowan conducting the neutrino experiment (c. 1956)

Maxwell also used the example "All solids have a melting point." This is not falsifiable, because maybe the melting point will be reached at a higher temperature.[37][38] The law is falsifiable and more useful if we specify an upper bound on melting points or a way to calculate this upper bound.[AJ]

Another example from Maxwell is "All beta decays are accompanied with a neutrino emission from the same nucleus."[40] This is also not falsifiable, because maybe the neutrino can be detected in a different manner. The law is falsifiable and much more useful from a scientific point of view, if the method to detect the neutrino is specified.[41] Maxwell said that most scientific laws are metaphysical statements of this kind,[42] which, Popper said, need to be made more precise before they can be indirectly corroborated.[AI] In other words, specific technologies must be provided to make the statements inter-subjectively-verifiable, i.e., so that scientists know what the falsification or its failure actually means.

In his critique of the falsifiability criterion, Maxwell considered the requirement for decisions in the falsification of, both, the emission of neutrinos (see § Dogmatic falsificationism) and the existence of the melting point.[40] For example, he pointed out that had no neutrino been detected, it could have been because some conservation law is false. Popper did not argue against the problems of falsification per se. He always acknowledged these problems. Popper's response was at the logical level. For example, he pointed out that, if a specific way is given to trap the neutrino, then, at the level of the language, the statement is falsifiable, because "no neutrino was detected after using this specific way" formally contradicts it (and it is inter-subjectively-verifiable—people can repeat the experiment).

Natural selection edit

In the 5th and 6th editions of On the Origin of Species, following a suggestion of Alfred Russel Wallace, Darwin used "Survival of the fittest", an expression first coined by Herbert Spencer, as a synonym for "Natural Selection".[AK] Popper and others said that, if one uses the most widely accepted definition of "fitness" in modern biology (see subsection § Evolution), namely reproductive success itself, the expression "survival of the fittest" is a tautology.[AL][AM][AN]

Darwinist Ronald Fisher worked out mathematical theorems to help answer questions regarding natural selection. But, for Popper and others, there is no (falsifiable) law of Natural Selection in this, because these tools only apply to some rare traits.[AO][AP] Instead, for Popper, the work of Fisher and others on Natural Selection is part of an important and successful metaphysical research program.[43]

Mathematics edit

Popper said that not all unfalsifiable statements are useless in science. Mathematical statements are good examples. Like all formal sciences, mathematics is not concerned with the validity of theories based on observations in the empirical world, but rather, mathematics is occupied with the theoretical, abstract study of such topics as quantity, structure, space and change. Methods of the mathematical sciences are, however, applied in constructing and testing scientific models dealing with observable reality. Albert Einstein wrote, "One reason why mathematics enjoys special esteem, above all other sciences, is that its laws are absolutely certain and indisputable, while those of other sciences are to some extent debatable and in constant danger of being overthrown by newly discovered facts."[44]

Historicism edit

Popper made a clear distinction between the original theory of Marx and what came to be known as Marxism later on.[45] For Popper, the original theory of Marx contained genuine scientific laws. Though they could not make preordained predictions, these laws constrained how changes can occur in society. One of them was that changes in society cannot "be achieved by the use of legal or political means".[AQ] In Popper's view, this was both testable and subsequently falsified. "Yet instead of accepting the refutations", Popper wrote, "the followers of Marx re-interpreted both the theory and the evidence in order to make them agree. ... They thus gave a 'conventionalist twist' to the theory; and by this stratagem they destroyed its much advertised claim to scientific status."[AR][AS] Popper's attacks were not directed toward Marxism, or Marx's theories, which were falsifiable, but toward Marxists who he considered to have ignored the falsifications which had happened.[46] Popper more fundamentally criticized 'historicism' in the sense of any preordained prediction of history, given what he saw as our right, ability and responsibility to control our own destiny.[46]

Use in courts of law edit

Falsifiability has been used in the McLean v. Arkansas case (in 1982),[47] the Daubert case (in 1993)[48] and other cases. A survey of 303 federal judges conducted in 1998[AT] found that "[P]roblems with the nonfalsifiable nature of an expert's underlying theory and difficulties with an unknown or too-large error rate were cited in less than 2% of cases."[49]

McLean v. Arkansas case edit

In the ruling of the McLean v. Arkansas case, Judge William Overton used falsifiability as one of the criteria to determine that "creation science" was not scientific and should not be taught in Arkansas public schools as such (it can be taught as religion). In his testimony, philosopher Michael Ruse defined the characteristics which constitute science as (see Pennock 2000, p. 5, and Ruse 2010):

  • It is guided by natural law;
  • It has to be explanatory by reference to natural law;
  • It is testable against the empirical world;
  • Its conclusions are tentative, i.e., are not necessarily the final word; and
  • It is falsifiable.

In his conclusion related to this criterion Judge Overton stated that

While anybody is free to approach a scientific inquiry in any fashion they choose, they cannot properly describe the methodology as scientific, if they start with the conclusion and refuse to change it regardless of the evidence developed during the course of the investigation.

— William Overton, McLean v. Arkansas 1982, at the end of section IV. (C)

Daubert standard edit

In several cases of the United States Supreme Court, the court described scientific methodology using the five Daubert factors, which include falsifiability.[AU] The Daubert result cited Popper and other philosophers of science:

Ordinarily, a key question to be answered in determining whether a theory or technique is scientific knowledge that will assist the trier of fact will be whether it can be (and has been) tested. Scientific methodology today is based on generating hypotheses and testing them to see if they can be falsified; indeed, this methodology is what distinguishes science from other fields of human inquiry. Green 645. See also C. Hempel, Philosophy of Natural Science 49 (1966) ([T]he statements constituting a scientific explanation must be capable of empirical test); K. Popper, Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of Scientific Knowledge 37 (5th ed. 1989) ([T]he criterion of the scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability, or refutability, or testability) (emphasis deleted).

— Harry Blackmun, Daubert 1993, p. 593

David H. Kaye[AV] said that references to the Daubert majority opinion confused falsifiability and falsification and that "inquiring into the existence of meaningful attempts at falsification is an appropriate and crucial consideration in admissibility determinations."[AW]

Connections between statistical theories and falsifiability edit

Considering the specific detection procedure that was used in the neutrino experiment, without mentioning its probabilistic aspect, Popper wrote "it provided a test of the much more significant falsifiable theory that such emitted neutrinos could be trapped in a certain way". In this manner, in his discussion of the neutrino experiment, Popper did not raise at all the probabilistic aspect of the experiment.[41] Together with Maxwell, who raised the problems of falsification in the experiment,[40] he was aware that some convention must be adopted to fix what it means to detect or not a neutrino in this probabilistic context. This is the third kind of decisions mentioned by Lakatos.[50] For Popper and most philosophers, observations are theory impregnated. In this example, the theory that impregnates observations (and justifies that we conventionally accept the potential falsifier "no neutrino was detected") is statistical. In statistical language, the potential falsifier that can be statistically accepted (not rejected to say it more correctly) is typically the null hypothesis, as understood even in popular accounts on falsifiability.[51][52][53]

Different ways are used by statisticians to draw conclusions about hypotheses on the basis of available evidence. Fisher, Neyman and Pearson proposed approaches that require no prior probabilities on the hypotheses that are being studied. In contrast, Bayesian inference emphasizes the importance of prior probabilities.[54] But, as far as falsification as a yes/no procedure in Popper's methodology is concerned, any approach that provides a way to accept or not a potential falsifier can be used, including approaches that use Bayes' theorem and estimations of prior probabilities that are made using critical discussions and reasonable assumptions taken from the background knowledge.[AX] There is no general rule that considers as falsified an hypothesis with small Bayesian revised probability, because as pointed out by Mayo and argued before by Popper, the individual outcomes described in detail will easily have very small probabilities under available evidence without being genuine anomalies.[55] Nevertheless, Mayo adds, "they can indirectly falsify hypotheses by adding a methodological falsification rule".[55] In general, Bayesian statistic can play a role in critical rationalism in the context of inductive logic,[56] which is said to be inductive because implications are generalized to conditional probabilities.[57] According to Popper and other philosophers such as Colin Howson, Hume's argument precludes inductive logic, but only when the logic makes no use "of additional assumptions: in particular, about what is to be assigned positive prior probability".[58] Inductive logic itself is not precluded, especially not when it is a deductively valid application of Bayes' theorem that is used to evaluate the probabilities of the hypotheses using the observed data and what is assumed about the priors. Gelman and Shalizi mentioned that Bayes' statisticians do not have to disagree with the non-inductivists.[59]

Because statisticians often associate statistical inference with induction, Popper's philosophy is often said to have a hidden form of induction. For example, Mayo wrote "The falsifying hypotheses ... necessitate an evidence-transcending (inductive) statistical inference. This is hugely problematic for Popper".[60] Yet, also according to Mayo, Popper [as a non-inductivist] acknowledged the useful role of statistical inference in the falsification problems: she mentioned that Popper wrote her (in the context of falsification based on evidence) "I regret not studying statistics" and that her thought was then "not as much as I do".[61]

Lakatos's falsificationism edit

Imre Lakatos divided the problems of falsification in two categories. The first category corresponds to decisions that must be agreed upon by scientists before they can falsify a theory. The other category emerges when one tries to use falsifications and corroborations to explain progress in science. Lakatos described four kind of falsificationisms in view of how they address these problems. Dogmatic falsificationism ignores both types of problems. Methodological falsificationism addresses the first type of problems by accepting that decisions must be taken by scientists. Naive methodological falsificationism or naive falsificationism does not do anything to address the second type of problems.[62][63] Lakatos used dogmatic and naive falsificationism to explain how Popper's philosophy changed over time and viewed sophisticated falsificationism as his own improvement on Popper's philosophy, but also said that Popper some times appears as a sophisticated falsificationist.[64] Popper responded that Lakatos misrepresented his intellectual history with these terminological distinctions.[65]

Dogmatic falsificationism edit

A dogmatic falsificationist ignores that every observation is theory-impregnated. Being theory-impregnated means that it goes beyond direct experience. For example, the statement "Here is a glass of water" goes beyond experience, because the concepts of glass and water "denote physical bodies which exhibit a certain law-like behaviour" (Popper).[66] This leads to the critique that it is unclear which theory is falsified. Is it the one that is being studied or the one behind the observation?[AY] This is sometimes called the 'Duhem–Quine problem'. An example is Galileo's refutation of the theory that celestial bodies are faultless crystal balls. Many considered that it was the optical theory of the telescope that was false, not the theory of celestial bodies. Another example is the theory that neutrinos are emitted in beta decays. Had they not been observed in the Cowan–Reines neutrino experiment, many would have considered that the strength of the beta-inverse reaction used to detect the neutrinos was not sufficiently high. At the time, Grover Maxwell [es] wrote, the possibility that this strength was sufficiently high was a "pious hope".[40]

A dogmatic falsificationist ignores the role of auxiliary hypotheses. The assumptions or auxiliary hypotheses of a particular test are all the hypotheses that are assumed to be accurate in order for the test to work as planned.[67] The predicted observation that is contradicted depends on the theory and these auxiliary hypotheses. Again, this leads to the critique that it cannot be told if it is the theory or one of the required auxiliary hypotheses that is false. Lakatos gives the example of the path of a planet. If the path contradicts Newton's law, we will not know if it is Newton's law that is false or the assumption that no other body influenced the path.

Lakatos says that Popper's solution to these criticisms requires that one relaxes the assumption that an observation can show a theory to be false:[D]

If a theory is falsified [in the usual sense], it is proven false; if it is 'falsified' [in the technical sense], it may still be true.

— Imre Lakatos, Lakatos 1978, p. 24

Methodological falsificationism replaces the contradicting observation in a falsification with a "contradicting observation" accepted by convention among scientists, a convention that implies four kinds of decisions that have these respective goals: the selection of all basic statements (statements that correspond to logically possible observations), selection of the accepted basic statements among the basic statements, making statistical laws falsifiable and applying the refutation to the specific theory (instead of an auxiliary hypothesis).[AZ] The experimental falsifiers and falsifications thus depend on decisions made by scientists in view of the currently accepted technology and its associated theory.

Naive falsificationism edit

According to Lakatos, naive falsificationism is the claim that methodological falsifications can by themselves explain how scientific knowledge progresses. Very often a theory is still useful and used even after it is found in contradiction with some observations. Also, when scientists deal with two or more competing theories which are both corroborated, considering only falsifications, it is not clear why one theory is chosen above the other, even when one is corroborated more often than the other. In fact, a stronger version of the Quine-Duhem thesis says that it is not always possible to rationally pick one theory over the other using falsifications.[68] Considering only falsifications, it is not clear why often a corroborating experiment is seen as a sign of progress. Popper's critical rationalism uses both falsifications and corroborations to explain progress in science.[BA] How corroborations and falsifications can explain progress in science was a subject of disagreement between many philosophers, especially between Lakatos and Popper.[BB]

Popper distinguished between the creative and informal process from which theories and accepted basic statements emerge and the logical and formal process where theories are falsified or corroborated.[C][BC][BD] The main issue is whether the decision to select a theory among competing theories in the light of falsifications and corroborations could be justified using some kind of formal logic.[BE] It is a delicate question, because this logic would be inductive: it justifies a universal law in view of instances. Also, falsifications, because they are based on methodological decisions, are useless in a strict justification perspective. The answer of Lakatos and many others to that question is that it should.[BF][BG] In contradistinction, for Popper, the creative and informal part is guided by methodological rules, which naturally say to favour theories that are corroborated over those that are falsified,[BH] but this methodology can hardly be made rigorous.[BI]

Popper's way to analyze progress in science was through the concept of verisimilitude, a way to define how close a theory is to the truth, which he did not consider very significant, except (as an attempt) to describe a concept already clear in practice. Later, it was shown that the specific definition proposed by Popper cannot distinguish between two theories that are false, which is the case for all theories in the history of science.[BJ] Today, there is still on going research on the general concept of verisimilitude.[69]

From the problem of induction to falsificationism edit

Hume explained induction with a theory of the mind[70] that was in part inspired by Newton's theory of gravitation.[BK] Popper rejected Hume's explanation of induction and proposed his own mechanism: science progresses by trial and error within an evolutionary epistemology. Hume believed that his psychological induction process follows laws of nature, but, for him, this does not imply the existence of a method of justification based on logical rules. In fact, he argued that any induction mechanism, including the mechanism described by his theory, could not be justified logically.[71] Similarly, Popper adopted an evolutionary epistemology, which implies that some laws explain progress in science, but yet insists that the process of trial and error is hardly rigorous and that there is always an element of irrationality in the creative process of science. The absence of a method of justification is a built-in aspect of Popper's trial and error explanation.

As rational as they can be, these explanations that refer to laws, but cannot be turned into methods of justification (and thus do not contradict Hume's argument or its premises), were not sufficient for some philosophers. In particular, Russell once expressed the view that if Hume's problem cannot be solved, “there is no intellectual difference between sanity and insanity”[71] and actually proposed a method of justification.[72][73] He rejected Hume's premise that there is a need to justify any principle that is itself used to justify induction.[BL] It might seem that this premise is hard to reject, but to avoid circular reasoning we do reject it in the case of deductive logic. It makes sense to also reject this premise in the case of principles to justify induction. Lakatos's proposal of sophisticated falsificationism was very natural in that context.

Therefore, Lakatos urged Popper to find an inductive principle behind the trial and error learning process[BM] and sophisticated falsificationism was his own approach to address this challenge.[BN][BO] Kuhn, Feyerabend, Musgrave and others mentioned and Lakatos himself acknowledged that, as a method of justification, this attempt failed, because there was no normative methodology to justify—Lakatos's methodology was anarchy in disguise.[BP][BQ][BR][BS][BT]

Falsificationism in Popper's philosophy edit

Popper's philosophy is sometimes said to fail to recognize the Quine-Duhem thesis, which would make it a form of dogmatic falsificationism. For example, Watkins wrote "apparently forgetting that he had once said 'Duhem is right [...]', Popper set out to devise potential falsifiers just for Newton's fundamental assumptions".[74] But, Popper's philosophy is not always qualified of falsificationism in the pejorative manner associated with dogmatic or naive falsificationism.[75] The problems of falsification are acknowledged by the falsificationists. For example, Chalmers points out that falsificationists freely admit that observation is theory impregnated.[76] Thornton, referring to Popper's methodology, says that the predictions inferred from conjectures are not directly compared with the facts simply because all observation-statements are theory-laden.[77] For the critical rationalists, the problems of falsification are not an issue, because they do not try to make experimental falsifications logical or to logically justify them, nor to use them to logically explain progress in science. Instead, their faith rests on critical discussions around these experimental falsifications.[5] Lakatos made a distinction between a "falsification" (with quotation marks) in Popper's philosophy and a falsification (without quotation marks) that can be used in a systematic methodology where rejections are justified.[78] He knew that Popper's philosophy is not and has never been about this kind of justification, but he felt that it should have been.[BM] Sometimes, Popper and other falsificationists say that when a theory is falsified it is rejected,[79][80] which appears as dogmatic falsificationism, but the general context is always critical rationalism in which all decisions are open to critical discussions and can be revised.[81]

Controversies edit

Methodless creativity versus inductive methodology edit

As described in section § Naive falsificationism, Lakatos and Popper agreed that universal laws cannot be logically deduced (except from laws that say even more). But unlike Popper, Lakatos felt that if the explanation for new laws cannot be deductive, it must be inductive. He urged Popper explicitly to adopt some inductive principle[BM] and sets himself the task to find an inductive methodology.[BU] However, the methodology that he found did not offer any exact inductive rules. In a response to Kuhn, Feyerabend and Musgrave, Lakatos acknowledged that the methodology depends on the good judgment of the scientists.[BP] Feyerabend wrote in "Against Method" that Lakatos's methodology of scientific research programmes is epistemological anarchism in disguise[BQ] and Musgrave made a similar comment.[BR] In more recent work, Feyerabend says that Lakatos uses rules, but whether or not to follow any of these rules is left to the judgment of the scientists.[BS] This is also discussed elsewhere.[BT]

Popper also offered a methodology with rules, but these rules are also not-inductive rules, because they are not by themselves used to accept laws or establish their validity. They do that through the creativity or "good judgment" of the scientists only. For Popper, the required non deductive component of science never had to be an inductive methodology. He always viewed this component as a creative process beyond the explanatory reach of any rational methodology, but yet used to decide which theories should be studied and applied, find good problems and guess useful conjectures.[BV] Quoting Einstein to support his view, Popper said that this renders obsolete the need for an inductive methodology or logical path to the laws.[BW][BX][BY] For Popper, no inductive methodology was ever proposed to satisfactorily explain science.

Ahistorical versus historiographical edit

Section § Methodless creativity versus inductive methodology says that both Lakatos's and Popper's methodology are not inductive. Yet Lakatos's methodology extended importantly Popper's methodology: it added a historiographical component to it. This allowed Lakatos to find corroborations for his methodology in the history of science. The basic units in his methodology, which can be abandoned or pursued, are research programmes. Research programmes can be degenerative or progressive and only degenerative research programmes must be abandoned at some point. For Lakatos, this is mostly corroborated by facts in history.

In contradistinction, Popper did not propose his methodology as a tool to reconstruct the history of science. Yet, some times, he did refer to history to corroborate his methodology. For example, he remarked that theories that were considered great successes were also the most likely to be falsified. Zahar's view was that, with regard to corroborations found in the history of science, there was only a difference of emphasis between Popper and Lakatos.

As an anecdotal example, in one of his articles Lakatos challenged Popper to show that his theory was falsifiable: he asked "Under what conditions would you give up your demarcation criterion?".[82] Popper replied "I shall give up my theory if Professor Lakatos succeeds in showing that Newton's theory is no more falsifiable by 'observable states of affairs' than is Freud's."[83]

Normal science versus revolutionary science edit

Thomas Kuhn analyzed what he calls periods of normal science as well as revolutions from one period of normal science to another,[84] whereas Popper's view is that only revolutions are relevant.[BZ][CA] For Popper, the role of science, mathematics and metaphysics, actually the role of any knowledge, is to solve puzzles.[CB] In the same line of thought, Kuhn observes that in periods of normal science the scientific theories, which represent some paradigm, are used to routinely solve puzzles and the validity of the paradigm is hardly in question. It is only when important new puzzles emerge that cannot be solved by accepted theories that a revolution might occur. This can be seen as a viewpoint on the distinction made by Popper between the informal and formal process in science (see section § Naive falsificationism). In the big picture presented by Kuhn, the routinely solved puzzles are corroborations. Falsifications or otherwise unexplained observations are unsolved puzzles. All of these are used in the informal process that generates a new kind of theory. Kuhn says that Popper emphasizes formal or logical falsifications and fails to explain how the social and informal process works.

Unfalsifiability versus falsity of astrology edit

Popper often uses astrology as an example of a pseudoscience. He says that it is not falsifiable because both the theory itself and its predictions are too imprecise.[CC] Kuhn, as an historian of science, remarked that many predictions made by astrologers in the past were quite precise and they were very often falsified. He also said that astrologers themselves acknowledged these falsifications.[CD]

Epistemological anarchism vs the scientific method edit

Paul Feyerabend rejected any prescriptive methodology at all. He rejected Lakatos's argument for ad hoc hypothesis, arguing that science would not have progressed without making use of any and all available methods to support new theories. He rejected any reliance on a scientific method, along with any special authority for science that might derive from such a method.[85] He said that if one is keen to have a universally valid methodological rule, epistemological anarchism or anything goes would be the only candidate.[86] For Feyerabend, any special status that science might have, derives from the social and physical value of the results of science rather than its method.[87]

Sokal and Bricmont edit

In their book Fashionable Nonsense (from 1997, published in the UK as Intellectual Impostures) the physicists Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont criticised falsifiability.[88] They include this critique in the "Intermezzo" chapter, where they expose their own views on truth in contrast to the extreme epistemological relativism of postmodernism. Even though Popper is clearly not a relativist, Sokal and Bricmont discuss falsifiability because they see postmodernist epistemological relativism as a reaction to Popper's description of falsifiability, and more generally, to his theory of science.[89]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Popper discusses the notion of imaginary state of affairs in the context of scientific realism in Popper 1972, Chap.2, Sec.5: (emphasis added) "[H]uman language is essentially descriptive (and argumentative), and an unambiguous description is always realistic: it is of something—of some state of affairs which may be real or imaginary. Thus if the state of affairs is imaginary, then the description is simply false and its negation is a true description of reality, in Tarski's sense." He continues (emphasis added) "Tarski's theory more particularly makes clear just what fact a statement P will correspond to if it corresponds to any fact: namely the fact that p. ... a false statement P is false not because it corresponds to some odd entity like a non-fact, but simply because it does not correspond to any fact: it does not stand in the peculiar relation of correspondence to a fact to anything real, though it stands in a relation like 'describes' to the spurious state of affairs that p."
  2. ^ Popper wanted the main text of the 1959 English version, The Logic of Scientific Discovery, to conform to the original, thus refused to make substantial corrections and only added notes and appendices and marked them with an asterisk (see Popper 1959, Translators' note).
  3. ^ a b c Thornton 2016, sec. 3: "Popper has always drawn a clear distinction between the logic of falsifiability and its applied methodology. The logic of his theory is utterly simple: if a single ferrous metal is unaffected by a magnetic field it cannot be the case that all ferrous metals are affected by magnetic fields. Logically speaking, a scientific law is conclusively falsifiable although it is not conclusively verifiable. Methodologically, however, the situation is much more complex: no observation is free from the possibility of error—consequently we may question whether our experimental result was what it appeared to be."
  4. ^ a b c Popper 1983, Introduction 1982: "We must distinguish two meanings of the expressions falsifiable and falsifiability:
    "1) Falsifiable as a logical-technical term, in the sense of the demarcation criterion of falsifiability. This purely logical concept—falsifiable in principle, one might say—rests on a logical relation between the theory in question and the class of basic statements (or the potential falsifiers described by them).
    "2) Falsifiable in the sense that the theory in question can definitively or conclusively or demonstrably be falsified ("demonstrably falsifiable").
    "I have always stressed that even a theory which is obviously falsifiable in the first sense is never falsifiable in this second sense. (For this reason I have used the expression falsifiable as a rule only in the first, technical sense. In the second sense, I have as a rule spoken not of falsifiability but rather of falsification and of its problems)."
  5. ^ a b Popper 1983, Introduction 1982: "Although the first sense refers to the logical possibility of a falsification in principle, the second sense refers to a conclusive practical experimental proof of falsity. But anything like conclusive proof to settle an empirical question does not exist. An entire literature rests on the failure to observe this distinction." For a discussion related to this lack of distinction, see Rosende 2009, p. 142.
  6. ^ "All swans are white" is often chosen as an example of a falsifiable statement, because for some 1500 years, the black swan existed in the European imagination as a metaphor for that which could not exist. Had the presumption concerning black swans in this metaphor be right, the statement would still have been falsifiable.
  7. ^ The falsifiability criterion is formulated in terms of basic statements or observation statements without requiring that we know which ones of these observation statements correspond to actual facts. These basic statements break the symmetry, while being purely logical concepts.
  8. ^ Falsifiability does not require falsification. A past, present and even a future falsification would be a problematic requirement: it cannot be achieved, because definitive rigorous falsifications are impossible and, if a theory nevertheless met this requirement, it would not be much better than a falsified theory.
  9. ^ Popper's argument is that inductive inference is a fallacy : "I hold with Hume that there simply is no such logical entity as an inductive inference; or, that all so-called inductive inferences are logically invalid".[90][4]
  10. ^ Popper 1983, chap. 1, sec. 3: "It seems that almost everybody believes in induction; believes, that is, that we learn by the repetition of observations. Even Hume, in spite of his great discovery that a natural law can neither be established nor made 'probable' by induction, continued to believe firmly that animals and men do learn through repetition: through repeated observations as well as through the formation of habits, or the strengthening of habits, by repetition. And he upheld the theory that induction, though rationally indefensible and resulting in nothing better than unreasoned belief, was nevertheless reliable in the main—more reliable and useful at any rate than reason and the processes of reasoning; and that 'experience' was thus the unreasoned result of a (more or less passive) accumulation of observations. As against all this, I happen to believe that in fact we never draw inductive inferences, or make use of what are now called 'inductive procedures'. Rather, we always discover regularities by the essentially different method of trial and error."
  11. ^ Popper 1959, part I, chap. 2, sec. 11: "[I] dispense with the principle of induction: not because such a principle is as a matter of fact never used in science, but because I think that it is not needed; that it does not help us; and that it even gives rise to inconsistencies."
  12. ^ Popper 1962, p. 35: "As for Adler, I was much impressed by a personal experience. Once, in 1919, I reported to him a case which to me did not seem particularly Adlerian, but which he found no difficulty in analysing in terms of his theory of inferiority feelings, although he had not even seen the child. Slightly shocked, I asked him how he could be so sure. 'Because of my thousandfold experience,' he replied; whereupon I could not help saying: 'And with this new case, I suppose, your experience has become thousand-and-one-fold.'"
  13. ^ Thornton 2007, p. 3: "However, a theory that has successfully withstood critical testing is thereby 'corroborated', and may be regarded as being preferable to falsified rivals. In the case of rival unfalsified theories, for Popper, the higher the informative content of a theory the better it is scientifically, because every gain in content brings with it a commensurate gain in predictive scope and testability."
  14. ^ Popper 1959, p. 19: "Various objections might be raised against the criterion of demarcation here proposed. In the first place, it may well seem somewhat wrong-headed to suggest that science, which is supposed to give us positive information, should be characterized as satisfying a negative requirement such as refutability. However, I shall show, in sections 31 to 46, that this objection has little weight, since the amount of positive information about the world which is conveyed by a scientific statement is the greater the more likely it is to clash, because of its logical character, with possible singular statements. (Not for nothing do we call the laws of nature 'laws': the more they prohibit the more they say.)"
  15. ^ Feigl 1978: "Karl Popper, an Austrian-born British philosopher of science, in his Logik der Forschung (1935; The Logic of Scientific Discovery), insisted that the meaning criterion should be abandoned and replaced by a criterion of demarcation between empirical (scientific) and transempirical (nonscientific, metaphysical) questions and answers—a criterion that, according to Popper, is to be testability."
  16. ^ Popper 1972, Sec. 1.9: "Quite apart from [Hume's psychological theory of induction], I felt that psychology should be regarded as a biological discipline, and especially that any psychological theory of the acquisition of knowledge should be so regarded. Now if we transfer to human and animal psychology [the method that consists in choosing the best tested theory among conjectured theories], we arrive, clearly, at the well-known method of trial and error-elimination."
  17. ^ Popper 1959, Sec. 85: "What I have here in mind is not a picture of science as a biological phenomenon ...: I have in mind its epistemological aspects."
  18. ^ Popper 1959, pp. 7–8: "This latter is concerned not with questions of fact (Kant's quid facti?), but only with questions of justification or validity (Kant's quid juris?). Its questions are of the following kind. Can a statement be justified? And if so, how? Is it testable? Is it logically dependent on certain other statements? Or does it perhaps contradict them? In order that a statement may be logically examined in this way, it must already have been presented to us. Someone must have formulated it, and submitted it to logical examination."
  19. ^ Popper 1972, Sec. 1.8: "The fundamental difference between my approach and the approach for which I long ago introduced the label 'inductivist' is that I lay stress on negative arguments, such as negative instances or counter-examples, refutations, and attempted refutations—in short, criticism".
  20. ^ a b Popper 1974, p. 1005: "Newton's theory ... would equally be contradicted if the apples from one of my, or Newton's, apple trees were to rise from the ground (without there being a whirling about), and begin to dance round the branches of the apple tree from which they had fallen."
  21. ^ In a spirit of criticism, Watkins (Watkins1984, Sec. 8.52) liked to refer to invisible strings instead of some abstract law to explain this kind of evidence against Newton's Gravity.
  22. ^ The requirement that the language must be empirical is known in the literature as the material requirement. For example, see Nola & Sankey 2014, pp. 256, 268 and Shea 2020, Sec 2.c. This requirement says that the statements that describe observations, the basic statements, must be intersubjectively verifiable.
  23. ^ a b In Popper's description of the scientific procedure of testing, as explained by Thornton (see Thornton 2016, Sec. 4), there is no discussion of factual observations except in those tests that compare the theory with factual observations, but in these tests too the procedure is mostly logical and involves observations that are only logical constructions (Popper 1959, pp. 9–10): "We may if we like distinguish four different lines along which the testing of a theory could be carried out. First there is the logical comparison of the conclusions among themselves, by which the internal consistency of the system is tested. Secondly, there is the investigation of the logical form of the theory, with the object of determining whether it has the character of an empirical or scientific theory, or whether it is, for example, tautological. Thirdly, there is the comparison with other theories, chiefly with the aim of determining whether the theory would constitute a scientific advance should it survive our various tests. And finally, there is the testing of the theory by way of empirical applications of the conclusions which can be derived from it. ... Here too the procedure of testing turns out to be deductive. With the help of other statements, previously accepted, certain singular statements—which we may call 'predictions'—are deduced from the theory; especially predictions that are easily testable or applicable. From among these statements, those are selected which are not derivable from the current theory, and more especially those which the current theory contradicts."
  24. ^ Popper 1959, p. 9: "According to the view that will be put forward here, the method of critically testing theories, and selecting them according to the results of tests, always proceeds on the following lines. From a new idea, put up tentatively, and not yet justified in any way—an anticipation, a hypothesis, a theoretical system, or what you will—conclusions are drawn by means of logical deduction. These conclusions are then compared with one another and with other relevant statements, so as to find what logical relations (such as equivalence, derivability, compatibility, or incompatibility) exist between them."
  25. ^ In practice, technologies change. When the interpretation of a theory is modified by an improved technological interpretation of some properties, the new theory can be seen as the same theory with an enlarged scope. For example, Herbert Keuth [de], (Keuth 2005, p. 43) wrote: "But Popper's falsifiability or testability criterion does not presuppose that a definite distinction between testable and non testable statement is possible ... technology changes. Thus a hypotheses that was first untestable may become testable later on."
  26. ^ Popper 1959, section 7, page 21: "If falsifiability is to be at all applicable as a criterion of demarcation, then singular statements must be available which can serve as premisses in falsifying inferences. Our criterion therefore appears only to shift the problem—to lead us back from the question of the empirical character of theories to the question of the empirical character of singular statements.
    "Yet even so, something has been gained. For in the practice of scientific research, demarcation is sometimes of immediate urgency in connection with theoretical systems, whereas in connection with singular statements, doubt as to their empirical character rarely arises. It is true that errors of observation occur and that they give rise to false singular statements, but the scientist scarcely ever has occasion to describe a singular statement as non-empirical or metaphysical."
  27. ^ a b Popper 1962, p. 387: "Before using the terms 'basic' and 'basic statement', I made use of the term 'empirical basis', meaning by it the class of all those statements which may function as tests of empirical theories (that is, as potential falsifiers). In introducing the term 'empirical basis' my intention was, partly, to give an ironical emphasis to my thesis that the empirical basis of our theories is far from firm; that it should be compared to a swamp rather than to solid ground."
  28. ^ This perspective can be found in any text on model theory. For example, see Ebbinghaus 2017.
  29. ^ Popper put as an example of falsifiable statement with failed falsifications Einstein's equivalence principle. See Popper 1983, Introduction, sec. I: "Einstein's principle of proportionality of inert and (passively) heavy mass. This equivalence principle conflicts with many potential falsifiers: events whose observation is logically possible. Yet despite all attempts (the experiments by Eötvös, more recently refined by Rickle) to realize such a falsification experimentally, the experiments have so far corroborated the principle of equivalence."
  30. ^ Fisher 1930, p. 34: "Since m measures fitness to survive by the objective fact of representation in future generations,"
  31. ^ For example, see Cruzan 2018, p. 156, Muehlenbein 2010, p. 21 or Ridley 2003, website complement
  32. ^ Popper 1980, p. 611: "It does appear that some people think that I denied scientific character to the historical sciences, such as palaeontology, or the history of the evolution of life on Earth. This is a mistake, and I here wish to affirm that these and other historical sciences have in my opinion scientific character; their hypotheses can in many cases be tested."
  33. ^ If the criteria to identify an angel was simply to observe large wings, then "this angel does not have large wings" would be a logical contradiction and thus not a basic statement anyway.
  34. ^ Popper 1983, Introduction, xx: "This theory ['All human actions are egotistic, motivated by self-interest'] is widely held: it has variants in behaviourism, psychoanalysis, individual psychology, utilitarianism, vulgar-marxism, religion, and sociology of knowledge. Clearly this theory, with all its variants, is not falsifiable: no example of an altruistic action can refute the view that there was an egotistic motive hidden behind it."
  35. ^ a b Popper 1974, p. 1038: "[A]s indeed is the case in Maxwell's example, when existential statements are verified this is done by means of stronger falsifiable statements. ... What this means is this. Whenever a pure existential statement, by being empirically "confirmed", appears to belong to empirical science, it will in fact do so not on its own account, but by virtue of being a consequence of a corroborated falsifiable theory."
  36. ^ Keuth 2005, p. 46: "[T]he existential quantifier in the symbolized version of "Every solid has a melting point" is not inevitable; rather this statement is actually a negligent phrasing of what we really mean."
  37. ^ Darwin 1869, pp. 72: "I have called this principle, by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term natural selection, in order to mark its relation to man's power of selection. But the expression often used by Mr. Herbert Spencer, of the Survival of the Fittest, is more accurate, and is sometimes equally convenient."
  38. ^ Thompson 1981, pp. 52–53, Introduction: "For several years, evolutionary theory has been under attack from critics who argue that the theory is basically a tautology. The tautology is said to arise from the fact that evolutionary biologists have no widely accepted way to independently define 'survival' and 'fitness.' That the statement, 'the fit survive,' is tautological is important, because if the critics are correct in their analysis, the tautology renders meaningless much of contemporary evolutionary theorizing. ... The definition of key evolutionary concepts in terms of natural selection runs the risk of making evolutionary theory a self-contained, logical system which is isolated from the empirical world. No meaningful empirical prediction can be made from one side to the other side of these definitions. One cannot usefully predict that nature selects the fittest organism since the fittest organism is by definition that which nature selects."
  39. ^ Waddington 1959, pp. 383–384: "Darwin's major contribution was, of course, the suggestion that evolution can be explained by the natural selection of random variations. Natural selection, which was at first considered as though it were a hypothesis that was in need of experimental or observational confirmation, turns out on closer inspection to be a tautology, a statement of an inevitable, although previously unrecognized, relation. It states that the fittest individuals in a population (defined as those which leave most offspring) will leave most offspring. Once the statement is made, its truth is apparent. This fact in no way reduces the magnitude of Darwin's achievement; only after it was clearly formulated, could biologists realize the enormous power of the principle as a weapon of explanation."
  40. ^ Popper 1994, p. 90: "If, more especially, we accept that statistical definition of fitness which defines fitness by actual survival, then the theory of the survival of the fittest becomes tautological, and irrefutable."
  41. ^ Thompson 1981, p. 53, Introduction: "Even if it did not make a tautology of evolution theory, the use of natural selection as a descriptive concept would have serious drawbacks. While it is mathematically tractable and easy to model in the laboratory, the concept is difficult to operationalize in the field. For field biologists, it is really a hypothetical entity. Clear, unambiguous instances of the operation of natural selection are difficult to come by and always greeted with great enthusiasm by biologists (Kettlewell, 1959 [the case of the peppered moths]; Shepherd, 1960). Thus, although the concept has much to recommend it as an explanatory one, it seems an overly abstract formulation on which to base a descriptive science."
  42. ^ Popper 1978, p. 342: "However, Darwin's own most important contribution to the theory of evolution, his theory of natural selection, is difficult to test. There are some tests, even some experimental tests; and in some cases, such as the famous phenomenon known as "industrial melanism", we can observe natural selection happening under our very eyes, as it were. Nevertheless, really severe tests of the theory of natural selection are hard to come by, much more so than tests of otherwise comparable theories in physics or chemistry."
  43. ^ Popper 1995, Chap.15 sec. III (page 101 here): "In Marx's view, it is vain to expect that any important change can be achieved by the use of legal or political means; a political revolution can only lead to one set of rulers giving way to another set—a mere exchange of the persons who act as rulers. Only the evolution of the underlying essence, the economic reality can produce any essential or real change—a social revolution."
  44. ^ Popper 1962, p. 37: "In some of its earlier formulations (for example in Marx's analysis of the character of the 'coming social revolution') their predictions were testable, and in fact falsified. Yet instead of accepting the refutations the followers of Marx re-interpreted both the theory and the evidence in order to make them agree. In this way they rescued the theory from refutation; but they did so at the price of adopting a device which made it irrefutable. They thus gave a 'conventionalist twist' to the theory; and by this stratagem they destroyed its much advertised claim to scientific status."
  45. ^ Thornton 2016, Sec. 2: "The Marxist account of history too, Popper held, is not scientific, although it differs in certain crucial respects from psychoanalysis. For Marxism, Popper believed, had been initially scientific, in that Marx had postulated a theory which was genuinely predictive. However, when these predictions were not in fact borne out, the theory was saved from falsification by the addition of ad hoc hypotheses which made it compatible with the facts. By this means, Popper asserted, a theory which was initially genuinely scientific degenerated into pseudo-scientific dogma."
  46. ^ Surveys were mailed to all active U.S. district court judges in November 1998 (N = 619). 303 usable surveys were obtained for a response rate of 51%. See Krafka 2002, p. 9 in archived pdf.
  47. ^ The Daubert case and subsequent cases that used it as a reference, including General Electric Co. v. Joiner and Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, resulted in an amendment of the Federal Rules of Evidence (see Rules of Evidence 2017, p. 15, Rule 702 and Rule 702 Notes 2011). The Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael case and other cases considered the original Daubert factors, but the amended rule, rule 702, even though it is often referred to as the Daubert standard, does not include the original Daubert factors or mention falsifiability or testability and neither does the majority opinion delivered by William Rehnquist in the General Electric Co. v. Joiner case.
  48. ^ Not to be confused with David Kaye (law professor), United Nations special rapporteur. David H. Kaye is distinguished professor of law at Penn State Law.
  49. ^ Kaye 2005, p. 2: "several courts have treated the abstract possibility of falsification as sufficient to satisfy this aspect of the screening of scientific evidence. This essay challenges these views. It first explains the distinct meanings of falsification and falsifiability. It then argues that while the Court did not embrace the views of any specific philosopher of science, inquiring into the existence of meaningful attempts at falsification is an appropriate and crucial consideration in admissibility determinations. Consequently, it concludes that recent opinions substituting mere falsifiability for actual empirical testing are misconstruing and misapplying Daubert."
  50. ^ As Lakatos pointed out, scientists decide among themselves using critical discussions which potential falsifiers are accepted. There is no strict constraints on which method can be used to take the decision.
  51. ^ Popper 1962, p. 111: "Against the view here developed one might be tempted to object (following Duhem 28) that in every test it is not only the theory under investigation which is involved, but also the whole system of our theories and assumptions—in fact, more or less the whole of our knowledge—so that we can never be certain which of all these assumptions is refuted. But this criticism overlooks the fact that if we take each of the two theories (between which the crucial experiment is to decide) together with all this background knowledge, as indeed we must, then we decide between two systems which differ only over the two theories which are at stake. It further overlooks the fact that we do not assert the refutation of the theory as such, but of the theory together with that background knowledge; parts of which, if other crucial experiments can be designed, may indeed one day be rejected as responsible for the failure. (Thus we may even characterize a theory under investigation as that part of a vast system for which we have, if vaguely, an alternative in mind, and for which we try to design crucial tests.)"
  52. ^ These four decisions are mentioned in Lakatos 1978, pp. 22–25. A fifth decision is mentioned later by Lakatos to allow even more theories to be falsified.
  53. ^ Popper 1959, p. 91: "It may now be possible for us to answer the question: How and why do we accept one theory in preference to others? The preference is certainly not due to anything like a experiential justification of the statements composing the theory; it is not due to a logical reduction of the theory to experience. We choose the theory which best holds its own in competition with other theories; the one which, by natural selection, proves itself the fittest to survive. This will be the one which not only has hitherto stood up to the severest tests, but the one which is also testable in the most rigorous way. A theory is a tool which we test by applying it, and which we judge as to its fitness by the results of its applications."
  54. ^ Lakatos says that Popper is not the sophisticated falsificationist that he describes, but not the naive falsificationist either (see Lakatos 1978): "In an earlier paper,' I distinguished three Poppers: Popper0, Popper1, and Popper2. Popper0 is the dogmatic falsificationist ... Popper1 is the naive falsificationist, Popper2 the sophisticated falsificationist. ... The real Popper has never explained in detail the appeal procedure by which some 'accepted basic statements', may be eliminated. Thus the real Popper consists of Popper1 together with some elements of Popper2."
  55. ^ Popper clearly distinguishes between the methodological rules and the rules of pure logic (see Popper 1959, p. 32): "Methodological rules are here regarded as conventions. They might be described as the rules of the game of empirical science. They differ from the rules of pure logic"
  56. ^ Popper 1959, p. 27: "The theory of method, in so far as it goes beyond the purely logical analysis of the relations between scientific statements, is concerned with the choice of methods—with decisions about the way in which scientific statements are to be dealt with."
  57. ^ Zahar wrote a brief summary of Lakatos's position regarding Popper's philosophy. He says (see Zahar 1983, p. 149): "The important question of the possibility of a genuine logic of [scientific] discovery" is the main divergence between Lakatos and Popper. About Popper's view, Zahar wrote (see Zahar 1983, p. 169): "To repeat: Popper offers a Darwinian account of the progress of knowledge. Progress is supposed to result negatively from the elimination by natural selection of defective alternatives. ... There is no genuine logic of discovery, only a psychology of invention juxtaposed to a methodology which appraises fully fledged theories."
  58. ^ In Lakatos terminology, the term "falsified" has a different meaning for a naive falsificationist than for a sophisticated falsificationist. Putting aside this confusing terminological aspect, the key point is that Lakatos wanted a formal logical procedure to determine which theories we must keep (see Lakatos 1978, p. 32): "For the naive falsificationist a theory is falsified by a ('fortified') 'observational' statement which conflicts with it (or which he decides to interpret as conflicting with it). For the sophisticated falsificationist a scientific theory T is falsified if and only if another theory T' has been proposed with the following characteristics: ( 1 ) T' has excess empirical content over T: that is, it predicts novel facts, that is, facts improbable in the light of, or even forbidden, by (2) T' explains the previous success of T, that is, all the unrefuted content of T is included (within the limits of observational error) in the content of T'; and (3) some of the excess content of T' is corroborated."
  59. ^ In his critique of Popper (see Kuhn 1970, p. 15), Kuhn says that the methodological rules are not sufficient to provide a logic of discovery: "rules or conventions like the following: 'Once a hypothesis has been proposed and tested, and has proved its mettle, it may not be allowed to drop out without 'good reason'. A 'good reason' may be, for instance: replacement of the hypothesis by another which is better testable; or the falsification of one of the consequences of the hypothesis.'
    Rules like these, and with them the entire logical enterprise described above, are no longer simply syntactic in their import. They require that both the epistemological investigator and the research scientist be able to relate sentences derived from a theory not to other sentences but to actual observations and experiments. This is the context in which Sir Karl's term 'falsification' must function, and Sir Karl is entirely silent about how it can do so."
  60. ^ Popper gives an example of a methodological rule that uses corroborations (see Popper 1959, p. 32): "Once a hypothesis has been proposed and tested, and has proved its mettle, it may not be allowed to drop out without 'good reason'. A 'good reason' may be, for instance: replacement of the hypothesis by another which is better testable; or the falsification of one of the consequences of the hypothesis."
  61. ^ Popper 1959, section 23, 1st paragraph: "The requirement of falsifiability which was a little vague to start with has now been split into two parts. The first, the methodological postulate (cf. section 20), can hardly be made quite precise. The second, the logical criterion, is quite definite as soon as it is clear which statements are to be called 'basic'."
  62. ^ Popper 1983, Introduction, V: "The hope further to strengthen this theory of the aims of science by the definition of verisimilitude in terms of truth and of content was, unfortunately, vain. But the widely held view that scrapping this definition weakens my theory is completely baseless."
  63. ^ Morris & Brown 2021, Sec. 3: Hume explicitly models his account of the fundamental principles of the mind's operations—the principles of association—on the idea of gravitational attraction.
  64. ^ Russell 1948, Part VI, Sec. II: "We have therefore to seek for principles, other than induction, such that, given certain data not of the form “this A is a B”, the generalization “'all A is B”' has a finite probability. Given such principles, and given a generalization to which they apply, induction can make the generalization increasingly probable, with a probability which approaches certainty as a limit when the number of favourable instances in indefinitely increased."
  65. ^ a b c Zahar 1983, p. 167: "Lakatos urged Popper explicitly to adopt some inductive principle which would synthetically link verisimilitude to corroboration."
  66. ^ Lakatos 1978, Sec. 1.1: I shall try to explain—and further strengthen—this stronger Popperian position which, I think, may escape Kuhn's strictures and present scientific revolutions not as constituting religious conversions but rather as rational progress.
  67. ^ Lakatos 1978, Sec. 1.2.b: The other alternative is to ... replace the naive versions of methodological falsificationism ... by a sophisticated version which would give a new rationale of falsification and thereby rescue methodology and the idea of scientific progress.
  68. ^ a b Lakatos 1978, pp. 116–117: "The methodology of research programmes was criticized both by Feyerabend and by Kuhn. According to Kuhn: '[Lakatos] must specify criteria which can be used at the time to distinguish a degenerative from a progressive research programme; and so on. Otherwise, he has told us nothing at all.' Actually, I do specify such criteria. But Kuhn probably meant that '[my] standards have practical force only if they are combined with a time limit (what looks like a degenerating problem shift may be the beginning of a much longer period of advance)'. Since I specify no such time limit, Feyerabend concludes that my standards are no more than 'verbal ornament'. A related point was made by Musgrave in a letter containing some major constructive criticisms of an earlier draft, in which he demanded that I specify, for instance, at what point dogmatic adherence to a programme ought to be explained 'externally' rather than 'internally'. Let me try to explain why such objections are beside the point. One may rationally stick to a degenerating programme until it is overtaken by a rival and even after. What one must not do is to deny its poor public record. Both Feyerabend and Kuhn conflate methodological appraisal of a programme with firm heuristic advice about what to do. It is perfectly rational to play a risky game: what is irrational is to deceive oneself about the risk. This does not mean as much licence as might appear for those who stick to a degenerating programme. For they can do this mostly only in private."
  69. ^ a b Watkins 1989, p. 6: "Although Paul Feyerabend and Alan Musgrave evaluated [Lakatos's view] in opposite ways, they agreed about its nature. Feyerabend hailed it as an 'anarchism in disguise' (Feyerabend, Against Method, 1975), while Musgrave rather deplored the fact that Lakatos had 'gone a long way towards epistemological anarchism' (Musgrave 1976, p. 458). Musgrave added: 'Lakatos deprived his standards of practical force, and adopted a position of "anything goes"' (Musgrave 1976, p. 478)."
  70. ^ a b Musgrave 1976, p. 458: "My third criticism concerns the question of whether Lakatos's methodology is in fact a methodology in the old-fashioned sense: whether, that is, it issues in advice to scientists. I shall argue that Lakatos once had sound views on this matter, but was led, mistakenly in my opinion, to renounce them. In renouncing them, he has gone a long way towards epistemological anarchism."
  71. ^ a b Feyerabend 1978, p. 15: "Lakatos realized and admitted that the existing standards of rationality, standards of logic included, are too restrictive and would have hindered science had they been applied with determination. He therefore permitted the scientist to violate them ... However, he demanded that research programmes show certain features in the long run — they must be progressive. In Chapter 16 of [Against Method] (and in my essay 'On the Critique of Scientific Reason': Feyerabend 1978b, p. 120) I have argued that this demand no longer restricts scientific practice. Any development agrees with it. The demand (standard) is rational, but it is also empty. Rationalism and the demands of reason have become purely verbal in the theory of Lakatos." See also Feyerabend 1981, p. 148.
  72. ^ a b Couvalis 1997, pp. 74-75: "There is a sense in which Feyerabend is right. Lakatos fails to give precise mechanical rules for when a theory has been finally falsified. Yet an appropriate question might be whether such rules are possible or necessary to make science rational. ... There are, however, many rough and ready rules, the application of which has to be learned in practical contexts. ... This does not mean that precise rules cannot be used in certain contexts, but we need to use our judgement to decide when those rules are to be used."
  73. ^ Lakatos 1978, p. 112: "It should be pointed out, however, that the methodology of scientific research programmes has more teeth than Duhem's conventionalism: instead of leaving it to Duhem's unarticulated common sense to judge when a 'framework' is to be abandoned, I inject some hard Popperian elements into the appraisal of whether a programme progresses or degenerates or of whether one is overtaking another. That is, I give criteria of progress and stagnation within a programme and also rules for the 'elimination' of whole research programmes."
  74. ^ Zahar (Zahar 1983, p. 168) recognizes that formal rules in a methodology cannot be rational. Yet, at the level of the technology, that is, at the practical level, he says, scientists must nevertheless take decisions. Popper's methodology does not specify formal rules, but non-rational decisions will still have to be taken. He concludes that "Popper and Lakatos differ only over the levels at which they locate non-rationality in science: Lakatos at the level of an inductive principle which justifies technology, and Popper at the lower-level of technology itself."
  75. ^ Popper 1959, Sec. Elimination of Psychologism
  76. ^ Einstein wrote (see Yehuda 2018, p. 41): "The supreme task of the physicist is to arrive at those universal elementary laws from which the cosmos can be built up by pure deduction. There is no logical path to these laws; only intuition, resting on sympathetic understanding of experience, can reach them."
  77. ^ Einstein wrote (see Feldman & Williams 2007, p. 151 and [1]): "I am convinced that we can discover by means of purely mathematical constructions the concepts and laws connecting them with each other, which furnish the key to the understanding of natural phenomena. ... Experience remains, of course, the sole criterion of the physical utility of a mathematical construction. But the creative principle resides in mathematics. In a certain sense, therefore, I hold it true that pure thought can grasp reality, as the ancients dreamed."
  78. ^ Kuhn 1974, p. 802: "I suggest then that Sir Karl has characterized the entire scientific enterprise in terms that apply only to its occasional revolutionary parts. His emphasis is natural and common: the exploits of a Copernicus or Einstein make better reading than those of a Brahe or Lorentz; Sir Karl would not be the first if he mistook what I call normal science for an intrinsically uninteresting enterprise. Nevertheless, neither science nor the development of knowledge is likely to be understood if research is viewed exclusively through the revolutions it occasionally produces."
  79. ^ Watkins 1970, p. 28: "Thus we have the following clash: the condition which Kuhn regards as the normal and proper condition of science is a condition which, if it actually obtained, Popper would regard as unscientific, a state of affairs in which critical science had contracted into defensive metaphysics. Popper has suggested that the motto of science should be: Revolution in permanence! For Kuhn, it seems, a more appropriate maxim would be: Not nostrums but normalcy!"
  80. ^ Popper 1994, pp. 155–156: "It is my view that the methods of the natural as well as the social sciences can be best understood if we admit that science always begins and ends with problems. The progress of science lies, essentially, in the evolution of its problems. And it can be gauged by the increasing refinement, wealth, fertility, and depth of its problems. ... The growth of knowledge always consists in correcting earlier knowledge. Historically, science begins with pre-scientific knowledge, with pre-scientific myths and pre-scientific expectations. And these, in turn, have no 'beginnings'."
  81. ^ Popper 1962, p. 37: "[B]y making their interpretations and prophecies sufficiently vague [astrologers] were able to explain away anything that might have been a refutation of the theory had the theory and the prophecies been more precise. In order to escape falsification they destroyed the testability of their theory. It is a typical soothsayer's trick to predict things so vaguely that the predictions can hardly fail: that they become irrefutable."
  82. ^ Kuhn 1970, pp. 7–8: "Astrology is Sir Karl's most frequently cited example of a 'pseudo-science'. He [Popper] says: 'By making their interpretations and prophecies sufficiently vague they [astrologers] were able to explain away anything that might have been a refutation of the theory had the theory and the prophecies been more precise. In order to escape falsification they destroyed the testability of the theory.' Those generalizations catch something of the spirit of the astrological enterprise. But taken at all literally, as they must be if they are to provide a demarcation criterion, they are impossible to support. The history of astrology during the centuries when it was intellectually reputable records many predictions that categorically failed. Not even astrology's most convinced and vehement exponents doubted the recurrence of such failures. Astrology cannot be barred from the sciences because of the form in which its predictions were cast."

Abbreviated references edit

  1. ^ Mayo 2018, Sec. 2.3.
  2. ^ Harding 1976, p. X.
  3. ^ Mayo 2018, pp. 86–87.
  4. ^ a b Grayling 2019, p. 397.
  5. ^ a b Popper 1972.
  6. ^ Miller 1994, p. 1.
  7. ^ Uebel 2019.
  8. ^ Creath 2017.
  9. ^ MacLennan 2021, Chap. 8.1.
  10. ^ Thornton 2007.
  11. ^ a b Popper 1959, Sec. 85.
  12. ^ Watkins 1984, Sec. 7.2.
  13. ^ a b c d Johnson-Laird 2006, Chap. 13.
  14. ^ Popper 1959, Sec 2.
  15. ^ Popper 1972, App. 1.III.
  16. ^ Popper 1972, App. 1.II.
  17. ^ a b Popper 1972, Sec. 1.9.
  18. ^ Popper 1972, p. 30.
  19. ^ Gelman & Shalizi 2013.
  20. ^ Chalmers 2013, p. 62.
  21. ^ Popper 1959, Sec. 68.
  22. ^ Popper 1959, p. 32.
  23. ^ Shea 2020, Sec. 2.c.
  24. ^ Popper 1959, sec. 13–15, 28.
  25. ^ Lakatos 1978, p. 22.
  26. ^ a b Popper 1959, pp. 64–65.
  27. ^ Popper 1959, p. 65 Footnote *1.
  28. ^ Simon & Groen 1973.
  29. ^ Simon 1985.
  30. ^ a b Rynasiewicz 1983, Sec. 2.
  31. ^ Rudge 2005.
  32. ^ Theobald 2006.
  33. ^ Wallis 2005.
  34. ^ Dawkins 1995.
  35. ^ Dawkins 1986.
  36. ^ Dienes 2008, pp. 18–19.
  37. ^ a b Maxwell 1974, pp. 294–295.
  38. ^ a b Keuth 2005, pp. 44–45.
  39. ^ Leitgeb & Carus 2021, Sec. 8.1.
  40. ^ a b c d Maxwell 1974, p. 299.
  41. ^ a b Popper 1974, p. 1038.
  42. ^ Maxwell 1974, p. 295.
  43. ^ Elgin & Sober 2017.
  44. ^ Einstein 2010.
  45. ^ Popper 1995, Chap. 15.
  46. ^ a b Smith 2000, p. 12.
  47. ^ McLean v. Arkansas 1982.
  48. ^ Daubert 1993.
  49. ^ Krafka 2002, p. 17 in archived pdf.
  50. ^ Lakatos 1978, p. 25.
  51. ^ Wilkinson 2013.
  52. ^ Chiasma 2017.
  53. ^ Wigmore 2017.
  54. ^ Lehmann 1993, p. 201.
  55. ^ a b Mayo 2018, p. 82.
  56. ^ Hawthorne 2018, Sec. 3.2.
  57. ^ Hawthorne 2018, Sec. 2.1.
  58. ^ Howson 2000, p. 88.
  59. ^ Gelman & Shalizi 2013, pp. 26–27.
  60. ^ Mayo 2018, p. 83.
  61. ^ Mayo 2018, p. 86.
  62. ^ Lakatos 1978, pp. 12–30.
  63. ^ Pera 1989, p. 362.
  64. ^ Lakatos 1974.
  65. ^ Popper 1974, Note 70a.
  66. ^ Andersson 1994, Chap 3.
  67. ^ Understanding Science 2021.
  68. ^ Lakatos 1978, pp. 96–97.
  69. ^ Fine 2019.
  70. ^ Morris & Brown 2021, Sec. 4.
  71. ^ a b Henderson 2018.
  72. ^ Russell 1998, Chap. VI.
  73. ^ Russell 1948, Part VI, Sec. II.
  74. ^ Watkins 1984, Sec 8.5.
  75. ^ Chalmers 2013, p. 59.
  76. ^ Chalmers 2013, p. 60.
  77. ^ Thornton 2016, Sec 5.
  78. ^ Lakatos 1978, p. 36.
  79. ^ Popper 1962, Chap. 1; Sec IX.
  80. ^ Miller 1994, p. 7.
  81. ^ Garcia 2006, p. 30.
  82. ^ Lakatos 1974, p. 245.
  83. ^ Popper 1974, p. 1010.
  84. ^ Kuhn 1996.
  85. ^ Martin 2017.
  86. ^ Feyerabend 1993.
  87. ^ Broad 1979.
  88. ^ Sokal & Bricmont 1998.
  89. ^ Miller 2000.
  90. ^ Greenland 1998, p. 545.

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Further reading edit

  • Binns, Peter (March 1978). "The Supposed Asymmetry between Falsification and Verification". Dialectica. 32 (1): 29–40. doi:10.1111/j.1746-8361.1978.tb01300.x. JSTOR 42971398.
  • Blaug, Mark (1992). The Methodology of Economics: Or, How Economists Explain. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-43678-6.
  • Chapman, Siobhan (2008). Language and Empiricism: After the Vienna Circle. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-52476-7.
  • Corfield, David; Schölkopf, Bernhard; Vapnik, Vladimir (July 2009). "Falsificationism and Statistical Learning Theory: Comparing the Popper and Vapnik-Chervonenkis Dimensions". Journal for General Philosophy of Science. 40 (1): 51–58. doi:10.1007/s10838-009-9091-3. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0013-C3E9-3. JSTOR 40390670.
  • Dardashti, R.; Dawid, R.; Thébault, K., eds. (2019). Why Trust a Theory?: Epistemology of Fundamental Physics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108671224. ISBN 978-1-108-67122-4. S2CID 219957500.
  • De Pierris, Graciela; Friedman, Michael (4 June 2008). "Kant and Hume on Causality". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2013 ed.). from the original on 17 March 2019. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  • Derksen, A. A. (November 1985). "The Alleged Unity of Popper's Philosophy of Science: Falsifiability as Fake Cement". Philosophical Studies. 48 (3): 313–336. doi:10.1007/BF01305393. JSTOR 4319794. S2CID 171003093.
  • Duhem, Pierre (1906). La théorie physique: son objet et sa structure (in French). Chevalier & Rivière.
  • Duhem, Pierre (1991) [First published 1954]. The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-02524-X.
  • Elena, Santiago F.; Lenski, Richard E. (2003). "Evolution experiments with microorganisms: the dynamics and genetic bases of adaptation". Nature Reviews Genetics. 4 (6): 457–469. doi:10.1038/nrg1088. PMID 12776215. S2CID 209727.
  • Elkana, Yehuda (2018). "Einstein and God". In Galison, P.L.; Holton, G.; Schweber, S.S. (eds.). Einstein for the 21st Century: His Legacy in Science, Art, and Modern Culture. Princeton University Press.
  • Ferguson, Christopher J.; Heene, Moritz (2012). "A Vast Graveyard of Undead Theories: Publication Bias and Psychological Science's Aversion to the Null". Perspectives on Psychological Science. 7 (6): 555–561. doi:10.1177/1745691612459059. PMID 26168112. S2CID 6100616.
  • Garcia-Duque, Carlos Emilio (2002). Four Central Issues in Popper's Theory of Science (Thesis). University of Florida. OCLC 51946605.
  • Gawronski, Bertram; Bodenhausen, Galen V. (7 January 2015) [12 November 2014]. "Theory Evaluation". Theory and Explanation in Social Psychology. Guilford Publications. ISBN 978-1-4625-1848-7. from the original on 7 June 2020. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  • Hume, David (1896) [First published 1739]. (PDF). Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 779563. Falsifiability at the Internet Archive. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 August 2019.
  • Johansson, Lars-Goran (2015). "Theories About the Development of Science". Philosophy of Science for Scientists. Cham: Springer. pp. 106–108. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-26551-3_6. ISBN 978-3-319-26549-0. OCLC 923649072.
  • Kant, Immanuel (1787). Guyer, Paul; Wood, Allen W (eds.). Critique of Pure Reason. The Cambridge edition of the works of Immanuel Kant (1998 ed.). Cambridge, UK; New York: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511804649. ISBN 978-0-521-35402-8. OCLC 36438781.
  • Kasavin, Ilya; Blinov, Evgeny (2012). . In Ilya Kasavin (ed.). David Hume and Contemporary Philosophy. Cambridge Scholars. pp. 1–9. ISBN 978-1-4438-4131-3. OCLC 817562250. Archived from the original on 17 September 2016.
  • Koterski, Artur (2011). "The Rise and Fall of Falsificationism in the Light of Neurath's Criticism1". In Dieks, Dennis Geert Bernardus Johan; Gonzalez, Wenceslao J.; Hartmann, Stephan; Uebel, Thomas; Weber, Marcel (eds.). Explanation, Prediction, and Confirmation. Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective. Vol. 2. New York: Springer. pp. 487–498. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-1180-8_33. ISBN 978-94-007-1179-2. OCLC 706920414.
  • Lange, Marc (2008). "Hume and the Problem of Induction". In Gabbay, Dov M.; Woods, John (eds.). Inductive Logic. Handbook of the History of Logic. Vol. 10. Amsterdam; Boston: Elsevier. pp. 43–91. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.504.2727. ISBN 978-0-444-52936-7. OCLC 54111232.
  • Maxwell, Nicholas (2017). "Popper, Kuhn, Lakatos and Aim-Oriented Empiricism". Karl Popper, Science and Enlightenment. London: UCL Press. pp. 42–89. doi:10.14324/111.9781787350397. ISBN 978-1-78735-039-7. OCLC 1004353997.
  • McGinn, Colin (2002). "Looking for a Black Swan". The New York Review of Books (21 November 2002): 46–50. from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  • Merritt, David (February 2017). "Cosmology and convention". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics. Elsevier. 57: 41–52. arXiv:1703.02389. Bibcode:2017SHPMP..57...41M. doi:10.1016/j.shpsb.2016.12.002. S2CID 119401938.
  • Miller, David (2006). Out of Error: Further Essays on Critical Rationalism. Aldershot, UK; Burlington, VT: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-5068-3. OCLC 57641308.
  • Miller, David (2014). "Some Hard Questions for Critical Rationalism". Discusiones Filosóficas. 15 (24): 15–40. ISSN 0124-6127. from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  • Niiniluoto, Ilkka (1984) [Chapter first published 1978]. "Notes on Popper as Follower of Whewell and Peirce". Is Science Progressive?. Synthese Library. Vol. 177. Dordrecht; Boston: D. Reidel. pp. 18–60. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-1978-0_3. ISBN 90-277-1835-0. OCLC 10996819.
  • Ploch, Stefan (2003). "Metatheoretical problems in phonology with Occam's Razor and non-ad-hoc-ness". Living on the Edge: 28 Papers in Honour of Jonathan Kaye. Studies in Generative Grammar. Vol. 62.
  • Popper, Karl (1976). Bartley III, William W. (ed.). Unended Quest: An Intellectual Autobiography (2002 ed.). London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-28589-5. from the original on 5 October 2020. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  • Popper, Karl (26 February 1982). "Les chemins de la verite: L'Express va plus loin avec Karl Popper". L'Express (Interview). Interviewed by S. Lannes and A. Boyer. pp. 82–88.{{cite interview}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  • Popper, Karl (1989). "Zwei Bedeutungen von Falsifizierbarkeit [Two meanings of falsifiability]". In Seiffert, H.; Radnitzky, G. (eds.). Handlexikon der Wissenschaftstheorie [Dictionary of epistemology] (in German) (1992 ed.). München: Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag. ISBN 3-423-04586-8.
  • Popper, Karl (1992) [Originally written in 1962]. Bartley III, W.W. (ed.). Quantum Theory and the Schism in Physics: From the Postscript to the Logic of Scientific Discovery (2005 ed.). London; New York: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203713990. ISBN 0-415-09112-8. OCLC 26159482.
  • Popper, Karl (2009) [Manuscript 1933, Published in German 1979]. Eggers Hansen, Troels (ed.). The Two Fundamental Problems of the Theory of Knowledge. Translated by Pickel, Andreas. London; New York: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203371107. ISBN 978-0-415-39431-4. OCLC 212627154.
  • Rescher, Nicholas (1977). "Confirmationism vs. Falsificationism". Dialectics: A Controversy-Oriented Approach to the Theory of Knowledge. Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. 119–123. ISBN 0-87395-372-X. OCLC 3034395.
  • Rescher, Nicholas (1989). "Generality Preference and Falsificationism". Cognitive Economy: The Economic Dimension of the Theory of Knowledge. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 118–123. ISBN 0-8229-3617-8. OCLC 19264362.
  • Watkins, John (1974). "The Unity of Popper's Thought". In Schilpp, Paul Arthur (ed.). The Philosophy of Karl Popper. Vol. I. Illinois: Open Court. pp. 371–412. ISBN 0-87548-141-8. OCLC 2580491.
  • Woit, Peter (2018). "Beyond Falsifiability". Not even wrong.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of falsifiability at Wiktionary

falsifiability, deductive, standard, evaluation, scientific, theories, hypotheses, introduced, philosopher, science, karl, popper, book, logic, scientific, discovery, 1934, theory, hypothesis, falsifiable, refutable, logically, contradicted, empirical, test, s. Falsifiability is a deductive standard of evaluation of scientific theories and hypotheses introduced by the philosopher of science Karl Popper in his book The Logic of Scientific Discovery 1934 B A theory or hypothesis is falsifiable or refutable if it can be logically contradicted by an empirical test All swans are white is falsifiable and would be falsifiable even if there were no black swan to actually falsify it as it is clear what would be needed to disprove that statement A Popper proposed falsifiability as the cornerstone solution to both the problem of induction and the problem of demarcation He insisted that as a logical criterion his falsifiability is distinct from the related concept capacity to be proven wrong discussed in Lakatos s falsificationism C D E Even being a logical criterion its purpose is to make the theory predictive and testable and thus useful in practice Popper contrasted falsifiability to the intuitively similar concept of verifiability that was then current in logical positivism He argues that the only way to verify a claim such as All swans are white would be if one could theoretically observe all swans F which is not possible Instead falsifiability searches for the anomalous instance such that observing a single black swan is theoretically reasonable and sufficient to logically falsify the claim On the other hand the Duhem Quine thesis says that definitive experimental falsifications are impossible 1 and that no scientific hypothesis is by itself capable of making predictions because an empirical test of the hypothesis requires one or more background assumptions 2 According to Popper there is a clean asymmetry on the logical side G and falsifiability does not have the Duhem problem H because it is a logical criterion Experimental research has the Duhem problem and other problems such as induction I but according to Popper statistical tests which are only possible when a theory is falsifiable can still be useful within a critical discussion Philosophers such as Deborah Mayo consider that Popper comes up short in his description of the scientific role of statistical and data models 3 As a key notion in the separation of science from non science and pseudoscience falsifiability has featured prominently in many scientific controversies and applications even being used as legal precedent Contents 1 The problem of induction and demarcation 1 1 From Hume s problem to non problematic induction 2 Basic statements and the definition of falsifiability 2 1 Basic statements 2 2 The definition of falsifiability 2 3 Initial condition and prediction in falsifiers of laws 2 4 Falsifiability in model theory 3 Examples of demarcation and applications 3 1 Newton s theory 3 2 Einstein s equivalence principle 3 3 Evolution 3 3 1 Industrial melanism 3 3 2 Precambrian rabbit 3 4 Simple examples of unfalsifiable statements 3 5 Omphalos hypothesis 3 6 Useful metaphysical statements 3 7 Natural selection 3 8 Mathematics 3 9 Historicism 3 10 Use in courts of law 3 10 1 McLean v Arkansas case 3 10 2 Daubert standard 4 Connections between statistical theories and falsifiability 5 Lakatos s falsificationism 5 1 Dogmatic falsificationism 5 2 Naive falsificationism 5 3 From the problem of induction to falsificationism 5 4 Falsificationism in Popper s philosophy 6 Controversies 6 1 Methodless creativity versus inductive methodology 6 2 Ahistorical versus historiographical 6 3 Normal science versus revolutionary science 6 4 Unfalsifiability versus falsity of astrology 6 5 Epistemological anarchism vs the scientific method 6 6 Sokal and Bricmont 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Abbreviated references 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksThe problem of induction and demarcation editSee also Inductivism Problem of induction and Demarcation problem One of the questions in the scientific method is how does one move from observations to scientific laws This is the problem of induction Suppose we want to put the hypothesis that all swans are white to the test We come across a white swan We cannot validly argue or induce from here is a white swan to all swans are white doing so would require a logical fallacy such as for example affirming the consequent 4 Popper s idea to solve this problem is that while it is impossible to verify that every swan is white finding a single black swan shows that not every swan is white We might tentatively accept the proposal that every swan is white while looking out for examples of non white swans that would show our conjecture to be false Falsification uses the valid inference modus tollens if from a law L displaystyle L nbsp we logically deduce Q displaystyle Q nbsp but what is observed is Q displaystyle neg Q nbsp we infer that the law L displaystyle L nbsp is false For example given the statement L displaystyle L nbsp all swans are white we can deduce Q displaystyle Q nbsp the specific swan here is white but if what is observed is Q displaystyle neg Q nbsp the specific swan here is not white say black then all swans are white is false More accurately the statement Q displaystyle Q nbsp that can be deduced is broken into an initial condition and a prediction as in C P displaystyle C Rightarrow P nbsp in which C displaystyle C nbsp the thing here is a swan and P displaystyle P nbsp the thing here is a white swan If what is observed is C being true while P is false formally C P displaystyle C wedge neg P nbsp we can infer that the law is false For Popper induction is actually never needed in science J K Instead in Popper s view laws are conjectured in a non logical manner on the basis of expectations and predispositions 5 This has led David Miller a student and collaborator of Popper to write the mission is to classify truths not to certify them 6 In contrast the logical empiricism movement which included such philosophers as Moritz Schlick Rudolf Carnap Otto Neurath and A J Ayer wanted to formalize the idea that for a law to be scientific it must be possible to argue on the basis of observations either in favor of its truth or its falsity There was no consensus among these philosophers about how to achieve that but the thought expressed by Mach s dictum that where neither confirmation nor refutation is possible science is not concerned was accepted as a basic precept of critical reflection about science 7 8 9 Popper said that a demarcation criterion was possible but we have to use the logical possibility of falsifications which is falsifiability He cited his encounter with psychoanalysis in the 1910s It did not matter what observation was presented psychoanalysis could explain it Unfortunately the reason it could explain everything is that it did not exclude anything also L For Popper this was a failure because it meant that it could not make any prediction From a logical standpoint if one finds an observation that does not contradict a law it does not mean that the law is true A verification has no value in itself But if the law makes risky predictions and these are corroborated Popper says there is a reason to prefer this law over another law that makes less risky predictions or no predictions at all M N In the definition of falsifiability contradictions with observations are not used to support eventual falsifications but for logical falsifications that show that the law makes risky predictions which is completely different On the basic philosophical side of this issue Popper said that some philosophers of the Vienna Circle had mixed two different problems that of meaning and that of demarcation and had proposed in verificationism a single solution to both a statement that could not be verified was considered meaningless In opposition to this view Popper said that there are meaningful theories that are not scientific and that accordingly a criterion of meaningfulness does not coincide with a criterion of demarcation O From Hume s problem to non problematic induction edit The problem of induction is often called Hume s problem David Hume studied how human beings obtain new knowledge that goes beyond known laws and observations including how we can discover new laws He understood that deductive logic could not explain this learning process and argued in favour of a mental or psychological process of learning that would not require deductive logic He even argued that this learning process cannot be justified by any general rules deductive or not 10 Popper accepted Hume s argument and therefore viewed progress in science as the result of quasi induction which does the same as induction but has no inference rules to justify it 11 12 Philip N Johnson Laird professor of psychology also accepted Hume s conclusion that induction has no justification For him induction does not require justification and therefore can exist in the same manner as Popper s quasi induction does 13 When Johnson Laird says that no justification is needed he does not refer to a general method of justification that to avoid a circular reasoning would not itself require any justification On the contrary in agreement with Hume he refers to the fact that there is no general method of justification for induction and that s ok because the induction steps do not require justification 13 Instead these steps use patterns of induction that may or may not be applicable depending on the background knowledge Johnson Laird wrote P hilosophers have worried about which properties of objects warrant inductive inferences The answer rests on knowledge we don t infer that all the passengers on a plane are male because the first ten off the plane are men We know that this observation doesn t rule out the possibility of a woman passenger 13 The reasoning pattern that was not applied here is enumerative induction Popper was interested in the overall learning process in science to quasi induction which he also called the path of science 11 However Popper did not show much interest in these reasoning patterns which he globally referred to as psychologism 14 He did not deny the possibility of some kind of psychological explanation for the learning process especially when psychology is seen as an extension of biology but he felt that these biological explanations were not within the scope of epistemology P Q Popper proposed an evolutionary mechanism to explain the success of science 15 which is much in line with Johnson Laird s view that induction is just something that animals including human beings do to make life possible 13 but Popper did not consider it a part of his epistemology 16 He wrote that his interest was mainly in the logic of science and that epistemology should be concerned with logical aspects only R Instead of asking why science succeeds he considered the pragmatic problem of induction 17 This problem is not how to justify a theory or what is the global mechanism for the success of science but only what methodology do we use to pick one theory among theories that are already conjectured His methodological answer to the latter question is that we pick the theory that is the most tested with the available technology the one which in the light of our critical discussion appears to be the best so far 17 By his own account because only a negative approach was supported by logic Popper adopted a negative methodology S The purpose of his methodology is to prevent the policy of immunizing our theories against refutation It also supports some dogmatic attitude in defending theories against criticism because this allows the process to be more complete 18 This negative view of science was much criticized and not only by Johnson Laird In practice some steps based on observations can be justified under assumptions which can be very natural For example Bayesian inductive logic 19 is justified by theorems that make explicit assumptions These theorems are obtained with deductive logic not inductive logic They are sometimes presented as steps of induction because they refer to laws of probability even though they do not go beyond deductive logic This is yet a third notion of induction which overlap with deductive logic in the following sense that it is supported by it These deductive steps are not really inductive but the overall process that includes the creation of assumptions is inductive in the usual sense In a fallibilism perspective a perspective that is widely accepted by philosophers including Popper every learning step only creates or reinforces an assumption that is all what science does Basic statements and the definition of falsifiability editPopper distinguished between the logic of science and its applied methodology C For example Newton s law of gravitation is falsifiable it is falsified by The brick fell upwards when released 20 T An explanation for this imaginary state of affairs A such as some hidden force other than gravity acting on the brick would make it more intuitive U but is not needed for falsifiability because it is a logical criterion The empirical requirement on the potential falsifier also called the material requirement V is only that it is observable inter subjectively with existing technologies The logical part consists of theories statements and their purely logical relationship together with this material requirement which is needed for a connection with the methodological part The methodological part consists in Popper s view of informal rules which are used to guess theories accept observation statements as factual etc These include statistical tests Popper is aware that observation statements are accepted with the help of statistical methods and that these involve methodological decisions 21 When this distinction is applied to the term falsifiability it corresponds to a distinction between two completely different meanings of the term The same is true for the term falsifiable Popper said that he only uses falsifiability or falsifiable in reference to the logical side and that when he refers to the methodological side he speaks instead of falsification and its problems D Popper said that methodological problems require proposing methodological rules For example one such rule is that if one refuses to go along with falsifications then one has retired oneself from the game of science 22 The logical side does not have such methodological problems in particular with regard to the falsifiability of a theory because basic statements are not required to be possible Methodological rules are only needed in the context of actual falsifications So observations have two purposes in Popper s view On the methodological side observations can be used to show that a law is false which Popper calls falsification On the logical side observations which are purely logical constructions do not show a law to be false but contradict a law to show its falsifiability Unlike falsifications and free from the problems of falsification these contradictions establish the value of the law which may eventually be corroborated He wrote that an entire literature exists because this distinction was not observed E Basic statements edit In Popper s view of science statements of observation can be analyzed within a logical structure independently of any factual observations W X The set of all purely logical observations that are considered constitutes the empirical basis Popper calls them the basic statements or test statements They are the statements that can be used to show the falsifiability of a theory Popper says that basic statements do not have to be possible in practice It is sufficient that they are accepted by convention as belonging to the empirical language a language that allows intersubjective verifiability they must be testable by intersubjective observation the material requirement 23 Y See the examples in section Examples of demarcation and applications In more than twelve pages of The Logic of Scientific Discovery 24 Popper discusses informally which statements among those that are considered in the logical structure are basic statements A logical structure uses universal classes to define laws For example in the law all swans are white the concept of swans is a universal class It corresponds to a set of properties that every swan must have It is not restricted to the swans that exist existed or will exist Informally a basic statement is simply a statement that concerns only a finite number of specific instances in universal classes In particular an existential statement such as there exists a black swan is not a basic statement because it is not specific about the instance On the other hand this swan here is black is a basic statement Popper says that it is a singular existential statement or simply a singular statement So basic statements are singular existential statements The definition of falsifiability edit Thornton says that basic statements are statements that correspond to particular observation reports He then gives Popper s definition of falsifiability A theory is scientific if and only if it divides the class of basic statements into the following two non empty sub classes a the class of all those basic statements with which it is inconsistent or which it prohibits this is the class of its potential falsifiers i e those statements which if true falsify the whole theory and b the class of those basic statements with which it is consistent or which it permits i e those statements which if true corroborate it or bear it out Thornton Stephen Thornton 2016 at the end of section 3 As in the case of actual falsifiers decisions must be taken by scientists to accept a logical structure and its associated empirical basis but these are usually part of a background knowledge that scientists have in common and often no discussion is even necessary Z The first decision described by Lakatos 25 is implicit in this agreement but the other decisions are not needed This agreement if one can speak of agreement when there is not even a discussion exists only in principle This is where the distinction between the logical and methodological sides of science becomes important When an actual falsifier is proposed the technology used is considered in detail and as described in section Dogmatic falsificationism an actual agreement is needed This may require using a deeper empirical basis AA hidden within the current empirical basis to make sure that the properties or values used in the falsifier were obtained correctly Andersson 2016 gives some examples Popper says that despite the fact that the empirical basis can be shaky more comparable to a swamp than to solid ground AA the definition that is given above is simply the formalization of a natural requirement on scientific theories without which the whole logical process of science W would not be possible Initial condition and prediction in falsifiers of laws edit In his analysis of the scientific nature of universal laws Popper arrived at the conclusion that laws must allow us to deduce roughly speaking more empirical singular statements than we can deduce from the initial conditions alone 26 A singular statement that has one part only cannot contradict a universal law A falsifier of a law has always two parts the initial condition and the singular statement that contradicts the prediction However there is no need to require that falsifiers have two parts in the definition itself This removes the requirement that a falsifiable statement must make prediction In this way the definition is more general and allows the basic statements themselves to be falsifiable 26 Criteria that require that a law must be predictive just as is required by falsifiability when applied to laws Popper wrote have been put forward as criteria of the meaningfulness of sentences rather than as criteria of demarcation applicable to theoretical systems again and again after the publication of my book even by critics who pooh poohed my criterion of falsifiability 27 Falsifiability in model theory edit Scientists such as the Nobel laureate Herbert A Simon have studied the semantic aspects of the logical side of falsifiability 28 29 These studies were done in the perspective that a logic is a relation between formal sentences in languages and a collection of mathematical structures The relation usually denoted A ϕ displaystyle mathfrak A models phi nbsp says the formal sentence ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is true when interpreted in the structure A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp it provides the semantic of the languages AB According to Rynasiewicz in this semantic perspective falsifiability as defined by Popper means that in some observation structure in the collection there exists a set of observations which refutes the theory 30 An even stronger notion of falsifiability was considered which requires not only that there exists one structure with a contradicting set of observations but also that all structures in the collection that cannot be expanded to a structure that satisfies ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp contain such a contradicting set of observations 30 Examples of demarcation and applications editNewton s theory edit Main article Newton s law of universal gravitation In response to Lakatos who suggested that Newton s theory was as hard to show falsifiable as Freud s psychoanalytic theory Popper gave the example of an apple that moves from the ground up to a branch and then starts to dance from one branch to another T It is clearly impossible yet a basic statement that is a valid potential falsifier for Newton s theory because the position of the apple at different times can be measured Einstein s equivalence principle edit Main article Einstein s equivalence principle Another example of a basic statement is The inert mass of this object is ten times larger than its gravitational mass This is a basic statement because the inert mass and the gravitational mass can both be measured separately even though it never happens that they are different It is as described by Popper a valid falsifier for Einstein s equivalence principle AC Evolution edit Industrial melanism edit Main article Industrial melanism nbsp A black bodied and white bodied peppered mothIn a discussion of the theory of evolution Popper mentioned industrial melanism 31 as an example of a falsifiable law A corresponding basic statement that acts as a potential falsifier is In this industrial area the relative fitness of the white bodied peppered moth is high Here fitness means reproductive success over the next generation AD AE It is a basic statement because it is possible to separately determine the kind of environment industrial vs natural and the relative fitness of the white bodied form relative to the black bodied form in an area even though it never happens that the white bodied form has a high relative fitness in an industrial area Precambrian rabbit edit Main article Precambrian rabbit A famous example of a basic statement from J B S Haldane is These are fossil rabbits in the Precambrian era This is a basic statement because it is possible to find a fossil rabbit and to determine that the date of a fossil is in the Precambrian era even though it never happens that the date of a rabbit fossil is in the Precambrian era Despite opinions to the contrary 32 sometimes wrongly attributed to Popper AF this shows the scientific character of paleontology or the history of the evolution of life on Earth because it contradicts the hypothesis in paleontology that all mammals existed in a much more recent era Richard Dawkins adds that any other modern animal such as a hippo would suffice 33 34 35 Simple examples of unfalsifiable statements edit nbsp nbsp Even if it is accepted that angels exist All angels have large wings is not falsifiable because no technology exists to identify and observe angels A simple example of a non basic statement is This angel does not have large wings It is not a basic statement because though the absence of large wings can be observed no technology independent of the presence of wings AG exists to identify angels Even if it is accepted that angels exist the sentence All angels have large wings is not falsifiable Another example from Popper of a non basic statement is This human action is altruistic It is not a basic statement because no accepted technology allows us to determine whether or not an action is motivated by self interest Because no basic statement falsifies it the statement that All human actions are egotistic motivated by self interest is thus not falsifiable AH Omphalos hypothesis edit Main article Omphalos hypothesis Some adherents of young Earth creationism make an argument called the Omphalos hypothesis after the Greek word for navel that the world was created with the appearance of age e g the sudden appearance of a mature chicken capable of laying eggs This ad hoc hypothesis introduced into young Earth creationism is unfalsifiable because it says that the time of creation of a species measured by the accepted technology is illusory and no accepted technology is proposed to measure the claimed actual time of creation Moreover if the ad hoc hypothesis says that the world was created as we observe it today without stating further laws by definition it cannot be contradicted by observations and thus is not falsifiable This is discussed by Dienes in the case of a variation on the Omphalos hypothesis which in addition specifies that God made the creation in this way to test our faith 36 Useful metaphysical statements edit Grover Maxwell es discussed statements such as All men are mortal 37 This is not falsifiable because it does not matter how old a man is maybe he will die next year 38 Maxwell said that this statement is nevertheless useful because it is often corroborated He coined the term corroboration without demarcation Popper s view is that it is indeed useful because Popper considers that metaphysical statements can be useful but also because it is indirectly corroborated by the corroboration of the falsifiable law All men die before the age of 150 For Popper if no such falsifiable law exists then the metaphysical law is less useful because it is not indirectly corroborated AI This kind of non falsifiable statements in science was noticed by Carnap as early as 1937 39 nbsp Clyde Cowan conducting the neutrino experiment c 1956 Maxwell also used the example All solids have a melting point This is not falsifiable because maybe the melting point will be reached at a higher temperature 37 38 The law is falsifiable and more useful if we specify an upper bound on melting points or a way to calculate this upper bound AJ Another example from Maxwell is All beta decays are accompanied with a neutrino emission from the same nucleus 40 This is also not falsifiable because maybe the neutrino can be detected in a different manner The law is falsifiable and much more useful from a scientific point of view if the method to detect the neutrino is specified 41 Maxwell said that most scientific laws are metaphysical statements of this kind 42 which Popper said need to be made more precise before they can be indirectly corroborated AI In other words specific technologies must be provided to make the statements inter subjectively verifiable i e so that scientists know what the falsification or its failure actually means In his critique of the falsifiability criterion Maxwell considered the requirement for decisions in the falsification of both the emission of neutrinos see Dogmatic falsificationism and the existence of the melting point 40 For example he pointed out that had no neutrino been detected it could have been because some conservation law is false Popper did not argue against the problems of falsification per se He always acknowledged these problems Popper s response was at the logical level For example he pointed out that if a specific way is given to trap the neutrino then at the level of the language the statement is falsifiable because no neutrino was detected after using this specific way formally contradicts it and it is inter subjectively verifiable people can repeat the experiment Natural selection edit Main article Survival of the fittest Tautology In the 5th and 6th editions of On the Origin of Species following a suggestion of Alfred Russel Wallace Darwin used Survival of the fittest an expression first coined by Herbert Spencer as a synonym for Natural Selection AK Popper and others said that if one uses the most widely accepted definition of fitness in modern biology see subsection Evolution namely reproductive success itself the expression survival of the fittest is a tautology AL AM AN Darwinist Ronald Fisher worked out mathematical theorems to help answer questions regarding natural selection But for Popper and others there is no falsifiable law of Natural Selection in this because these tools only apply to some rare traits AO AP Instead for Popper the work of Fisher and others on Natural Selection is part of an important and successful metaphysical research program 43 Mathematics edit See also Mathematical proof Scientific method Relationship with mathematics Mathematics Mathematics as science and Philosophy of mathematics Popper s two senses of number statements Popper said that not all unfalsifiable statements are useless in science Mathematical statements are good examples Like all formal sciences mathematics is not concerned with the validity of theories based on observations in the empirical world but rather mathematics is occupied with the theoretical abstract study of such topics as quantity structure space and change Methods of the mathematical sciences are however applied in constructing and testing scientific models dealing with observable reality Albert Einstein wrote One reason why mathematics enjoys special esteem above all other sciences is that its laws are absolutely certain and indisputable while those of other sciences are to some extent debatable and in constant danger of being overthrown by newly discovered facts 44 Historicism edit See also Historicism Karl Popper Popper made a clear distinction between the original theory of Marx and what came to be known as Marxism later on 45 For Popper the original theory of Marx contained genuine scientific laws Though they could not make preordained predictions these laws constrained how changes can occur in society One of them was that changes in society cannot be achieved by the use of legal or political means AQ In Popper s view this was both testable and subsequently falsified Yet instead of accepting the refutations Popper wrote the followers of Marx re interpreted both the theory and the evidence in order to make them agree They thus gave a conventionalist twist to the theory and by this stratagem they destroyed its much advertised claim to scientific status AR AS Popper s attacks were not directed toward Marxism or Marx s theories which were falsifiable but toward Marxists who he considered to have ignored the falsifications which had happened 46 Popper more fundamentally criticized historicism in the sense of any preordained prediction of history given what he saw as our right ability and responsibility to control our own destiny 46 Use in courts of law edit Falsifiability has been used in the McLean v Arkansas case in 1982 47 the Daubert case in 1993 48 and other cases A survey of 303 federal judges conducted in 1998 AT found that P roblems with the nonfalsifiable nature of an expert s underlying theory and difficulties with an unknown or too large error rate were cited in less than 2 of cases 49 McLean v Arkansas case edit In the ruling of the McLean v Arkansas case Judge William Overton used falsifiability as one of the criteria to determine that creation science was not scientific and should not be taught in Arkansas public schools as such it can be taught as religion In his testimony philosopher Michael Ruse defined the characteristics which constitute science as see Pennock 2000 p 5 and Ruse 2010 It is guided by natural law It has to be explanatory by reference to natural law It is testable against the empirical world Its conclusions are tentative i e are not necessarily the final word and It is falsifiable In his conclusion related to this criterion Judge Overton stated thatWhile anybody is free to approach a scientific inquiry in any fashion they choose they cannot properly describe the methodology as scientific if they start with the conclusion and refuse to change it regardless of the evidence developed during the course of the investigation William Overton McLean v Arkansas 1982 at the end of section IV C Daubert standard edit Main article Daubert standardIn several cases of the United States Supreme Court the court described scientific methodology using the five Daubert factors which include falsifiability AU The Daubert result cited Popper and other philosophers of science Ordinarily a key question to be answered in determining whether a theory or technique is scientific knowledge that will assist the trier of fact will be whether it can be and has been tested Scientific methodology today is based on generating hypotheses and testing them to see if they can be falsified indeed this methodology is what distinguishes science from other fields of human inquiry Green 645 See also C Hempel Philosophy of Natural Science 49 1966 T he statements constituting a scientific explanation must be capable of empirical test K Popper Conjectures and Refutations The Growth of Scientific Knowledge 37 5th ed 1989 T he criterion of the scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability or refutability or testability emphasis deleted Harry Blackmun Daubert 1993 p 593 David H Kaye AV said that references to the Daubert majority opinion confused falsifiability and falsification and that inquiring into the existence of meaningful attempts at falsification is an appropriate and crucial consideration in admissibility determinations AW Connections between statistical theories and falsifiability editConsidering the specific detection procedure that was used in the neutrino experiment without mentioning its probabilistic aspect Popper wrote it provided a test of the much more significant falsifiable theory that such emitted neutrinos could be trapped in a certain way In this manner in his discussion of the neutrino experiment Popper did not raise at all the probabilistic aspect of the experiment 41 Together with Maxwell who raised the problems of falsification in the experiment 40 he was aware that some convention must be adopted to fix what it means to detect or not a neutrino in this probabilistic context This is the third kind of decisions mentioned by Lakatos 50 For Popper and most philosophers observations are theory impregnated In this example the theory that impregnates observations and justifies that we conventionally accept the potential falsifier no neutrino was detected is statistical In statistical language the potential falsifier that can be statistically accepted not rejected to say it more correctly is typically the null hypothesis as understood even in popular accounts on falsifiability 51 52 53 Different ways are used by statisticians to draw conclusions about hypotheses on the basis of available evidence Fisher Neyman and Pearson proposed approaches that require no prior probabilities on the hypotheses that are being studied In contrast Bayesian inference emphasizes the importance of prior probabilities 54 But as far as falsification as a yes no procedure in Popper s methodology is concerned any approach that provides a way to accept or not a potential falsifier can be used including approaches that use Bayes theorem and estimations of prior probabilities that are made using critical discussions and reasonable assumptions taken from the background knowledge AX There is no general rule that considers as falsified an hypothesis with small Bayesian revised probability because as pointed out by Mayo and argued before by Popper the individual outcomes described in detail will easily have very small probabilities under available evidence without being genuine anomalies 55 Nevertheless Mayo adds they can indirectly falsify hypotheses by adding a methodological falsification rule 55 In general Bayesian statistic can play a role in critical rationalism in the context of inductive logic 56 which is said to be inductive because implications are generalized to conditional probabilities 57 According to Popper and other philosophers such as Colin Howson Hume s argument precludes inductive logic but only when the logic makes no use of additional assumptions in particular about what is to be assigned positive prior probability 58 Inductive logic itself is not precluded especially not when it is a deductively valid application of Bayes theorem that is used to evaluate the probabilities of the hypotheses using the observed data and what is assumed about the priors Gelman and Shalizi mentioned that Bayes statisticians do not have to disagree with the non inductivists 59 Because statisticians often associate statistical inference with induction Popper s philosophy is often said to have a hidden form of induction For example Mayo wrote The falsifying hypotheses necessitate an evidence transcending inductive statistical inference This is hugely problematic for Popper 60 Yet also according to Mayo Popper as a non inductivist acknowledged the useful role of statistical inference in the falsification problems she mentioned that Popper wrote her in the context of falsification based on evidence I regret not studying statistics and that her thought was then not as much as I do 61 Lakatos s falsificationism editImre Lakatos divided the problems of falsification in two categories The first category corresponds to decisions that must be agreed upon by scientists before they can falsify a theory The other category emerges when one tries to use falsifications and corroborations to explain progress in science Lakatos described four kind of falsificationisms in view of how they address these problems Dogmatic falsificationism ignores both types of problems Methodological falsificationism addresses the first type of problems by accepting that decisions must be taken by scientists Naive methodological falsificationism or naive falsificationism does not do anything to address the second type of problems 62 63 Lakatos used dogmatic and naive falsificationism to explain how Popper s philosophy changed over time and viewed sophisticated falsificationism as his own improvement on Popper s philosophy but also said that Popper some times appears as a sophisticated falsificationist 64 Popper responded that Lakatos misrepresented his intellectual history with these terminological distinctions 65 Dogmatic falsificationism edit A dogmatic falsificationist ignores that every observation is theory impregnated Being theory impregnated means that it goes beyond direct experience For example the statement Here is a glass of water goes beyond experience because the concepts of glass and water denote physical bodies which exhibit a certain law like behaviour Popper 66 This leads to the critique that it is unclear which theory is falsified Is it the one that is being studied or the one behind the observation AY This is sometimes called the Duhem Quine problem An example is Galileo s refutation of the theory that celestial bodies are faultless crystal balls Many considered that it was the optical theory of the telescope that was false not the theory of celestial bodies Another example is the theory that neutrinos are emitted in beta decays Had they not been observed in the Cowan Reines neutrino experiment many would have considered that the strength of the beta inverse reaction used to detect the neutrinos was not sufficiently high At the time Grover Maxwell es wrote the possibility that this strength was sufficiently high was a pious hope 40 A dogmatic falsificationist ignores the role of auxiliary hypotheses The assumptions or auxiliary hypotheses of a particular test are all the hypotheses that are assumed to be accurate in order for the test to work as planned 67 The predicted observation that is contradicted depends on the theory and these auxiliary hypotheses Again this leads to the critique that it cannot be told if it is the theory or one of the required auxiliary hypotheses that is false Lakatos gives the example of the path of a planet If the path contradicts Newton s law we will not know if it is Newton s law that is false or the assumption that no other body influenced the path Lakatos says that Popper s solution to these criticisms requires that one relaxes the assumption that an observation can show a theory to be false D If a theory is falsified in the usual sense it is proven false if it is falsified in the technical sense it may still be true Imre Lakatos Lakatos 1978 p 24 Methodological falsificationism replaces the contradicting observation in a falsification with a contradicting observation accepted by convention among scientists a convention that implies four kinds of decisions that have these respective goals the selection of all basic statements statements that correspond to logically possible observations selection of the accepted basic statements among the basic statements making statistical laws falsifiable and applying the refutation to the specific theory instead of an auxiliary hypothesis AZ The experimental falsifiers and falsifications thus depend on decisions made by scientists in view of the currently accepted technology and its associated theory Naive falsificationism edit According to Lakatos naive falsificationism is the claim that methodological falsifications can by themselves explain how scientific knowledge progresses Very often a theory is still useful and used even after it is found in contradiction with some observations Also when scientists deal with two or more competing theories which are both corroborated considering only falsifications it is not clear why one theory is chosen above the other even when one is corroborated more often than the other In fact a stronger version of the Quine Duhem thesis says that it is not always possible to rationally pick one theory over the other using falsifications 68 Considering only falsifications it is not clear why often a corroborating experiment is seen as a sign of progress Popper s critical rationalism uses both falsifications and corroborations to explain progress in science BA How corroborations and falsifications can explain progress in science was a subject of disagreement between many philosophers especially between Lakatos and Popper BB Popper distinguished between the creative and informal process from which theories and accepted basic statements emerge and the logical and formal process where theories are falsified or corroborated C BC BD The main issue is whether the decision to select a theory among competing theories in the light of falsifications and corroborations could be justified using some kind of formal logic BE It is a delicate question because this logic would be inductive it justifies a universal law in view of instances Also falsifications because they are based on methodological decisions are useless in a strict justification perspective The answer of Lakatos and many others to that question is that it should BF BG In contradistinction for Popper the creative and informal part is guided by methodological rules which naturally say to favour theories that are corroborated over those that are falsified BH but this methodology can hardly be made rigorous BI Popper s way to analyze progress in science was through the concept of verisimilitude a way to define how close a theory is to the truth which he did not consider very significant except as an attempt to describe a concept already clear in practice Later it was shown that the specific definition proposed by Popper cannot distinguish between two theories that are false which is the case for all theories in the history of science BJ Today there is still on going research on the general concept of verisimilitude 69 From the problem of induction to falsificationism edit Hume explained induction with a theory of the mind 70 that was in part inspired by Newton s theory of gravitation BK Popper rejected Hume s explanation of induction and proposed his own mechanism science progresses by trial and error within an evolutionary epistemology Hume believed that his psychological induction process follows laws of nature but for him this does not imply the existence of a method of justification based on logical rules In fact he argued that any induction mechanism including the mechanism described by his theory could not be justified logically 71 Similarly Popper adopted an evolutionary epistemology which implies that some laws explain progress in science but yet insists that the process of trial and error is hardly rigorous and that there is always an element of irrationality in the creative process of science The absence of a method of justification is a built in aspect of Popper s trial and error explanation As rational as they can be these explanations that refer to laws but cannot be turned into methods of justification and thus do not contradict Hume s argument or its premises were not sufficient for some philosophers In particular Russell once expressed the view that if Hume s problem cannot be solved there is no intellectual difference between sanity and insanity 71 and actually proposed a method of justification 72 73 He rejected Hume s premise that there is a need to justify any principle that is itself used to justify induction BL It might seem that this premise is hard to reject but to avoid circular reasoning we do reject it in the case of deductive logic It makes sense to also reject this premise in the case of principles to justify induction Lakatos s proposal of sophisticated falsificationism was very natural in that context Therefore Lakatos urged Popper to find an inductive principle behind the trial and error learning process BM and sophisticated falsificationism was his own approach to address this challenge BN BO Kuhn Feyerabend Musgrave and others mentioned and Lakatos himself acknowledged that as a method of justification this attempt failed because there was no normative methodology to justify Lakatos s methodology was anarchy in disguise BP BQ BR BS BT Falsificationism in Popper s philosophy edit Popper s philosophy is sometimes said to fail to recognize the Quine Duhem thesis which would make it a form of dogmatic falsificationism For example Watkins wrote apparently forgetting that he had once said Duhem is right Popper set out to devise potential falsifiers just for Newton s fundamental assumptions 74 But Popper s philosophy is not always qualified of falsificationism in the pejorative manner associated with dogmatic or naive falsificationism 75 The problems of falsification are acknowledged by the falsificationists For example Chalmers points out that falsificationists freely admit that observation is theory impregnated 76 Thornton referring to Popper s methodology says that the predictions inferred from conjectures are not directly compared with the facts simply because all observation statements are theory laden 77 For the critical rationalists the problems of falsification are not an issue because they do not try to make experimental falsifications logical or to logically justify them nor to use them to logically explain progress in science Instead their faith rests on critical discussions around these experimental falsifications 5 Lakatos made a distinction between a falsification with quotation marks in Popper s philosophy and a falsification without quotation marks that can be used in a systematic methodology where rejections are justified 78 He knew that Popper s philosophy is not and has never been about this kind of justification but he felt that it should have been BM Sometimes Popper and other falsificationists say that when a theory is falsified it is rejected 79 80 which appears as dogmatic falsificationism but the general context is always critical rationalism in which all decisions are open to critical discussions and can be revised 81 Controversies editMethodless creativity versus inductive methodology edit Main article The problem of induction As described in section Naive falsificationism Lakatos and Popper agreed that universal laws cannot be logically deduced except from laws that say even more But unlike Popper Lakatos felt that if the explanation for new laws cannot be deductive it must be inductive He urged Popper explicitly to adopt some inductive principle BM and sets himself the task to find an inductive methodology BU However the methodology that he found did not offer any exact inductive rules In a response to Kuhn Feyerabend and Musgrave Lakatos acknowledged that the methodology depends on the good judgment of the scientists BP Feyerabend wrote in Against Method that Lakatos s methodology of scientific research programmes is epistemological anarchism in disguise BQ and Musgrave made a similar comment BR In more recent work Feyerabend says that Lakatos uses rules but whether or not to follow any of these rules is left to the judgment of the scientists BS This is also discussed elsewhere BT Popper also offered a methodology with rules but these rules are also not inductive rules because they are not by themselves used to accept laws or establish their validity They do that through the creativity or good judgment of the scientists only For Popper the required non deductive component of science never had to be an inductive methodology He always viewed this component as a creative process beyond the explanatory reach of any rational methodology but yet used to decide which theories should be studied and applied find good problems and guess useful conjectures BV Quoting Einstein to support his view Popper said that this renders obsolete the need for an inductive methodology or logical path to the laws BW BX BY For Popper no inductive methodology was ever proposed to satisfactorily explain science Ahistorical versus historiographical edit Main article Imre Lakatos Research programmes Section Methodless creativity versus inductive methodology says that both Lakatos s and Popper s methodology are not inductive Yet Lakatos s methodology extended importantly Popper s methodology it added a historiographical component to it This allowed Lakatos to find corroborations for his methodology in the history of science The basic units in his methodology which can be abandoned or pursued are research programmes Research programmes can be degenerative or progressive and only degenerative research programmes must be abandoned at some point For Lakatos this is mostly corroborated by facts in history In contradistinction Popper did not propose his methodology as a tool to reconstruct the history of science Yet some times he did refer to history to corroborate his methodology For example he remarked that theories that were considered great successes were also the most likely to be falsified Zahar s view was that with regard to corroborations found in the history of science there was only a difference of emphasis between Popper and Lakatos As an anecdotal example in one of his articles Lakatos challenged Popper to show that his theory was falsifiable he asked Under what conditions would you give up your demarcation criterion 82 Popper replied I shall give up my theory if Professor Lakatos succeeds in showing that Newton s theory is no more falsifiable by observable states of affairs than is Freud s 83 Normal science versus revolutionary science edit Main article Paradigm shift Thomas Kuhn analyzed what he calls periods of normal science as well as revolutions from one period of normal science to another 84 whereas Popper s view is that only revolutions are relevant BZ CA For Popper the role of science mathematics and metaphysics actually the role of any knowledge is to solve puzzles CB In the same line of thought Kuhn observes that in periods of normal science the scientific theories which represent some paradigm are used to routinely solve puzzles and the validity of the paradigm is hardly in question It is only when important new puzzles emerge that cannot be solved by accepted theories that a revolution might occur This can be seen as a viewpoint on the distinction made by Popper between the informal and formal process in science see section Naive falsificationism In the big picture presented by Kuhn the routinely solved puzzles are corroborations Falsifications or otherwise unexplained observations are unsolved puzzles All of these are used in the informal process that generates a new kind of theory Kuhn says that Popper emphasizes formal or logical falsifications and fails to explain how the social and informal process works Unfalsifiability versus falsity of astrology edit Main article Astrology Popper often uses astrology as an example of a pseudoscience He says that it is not falsifiable because both the theory itself and its predictions are too imprecise CC Kuhn as an historian of science remarked that many predictions made by astrologers in the past were quite precise and they were very often falsified He also said that astrologers themselves acknowledged these falsifications CD Epistemological anarchism vs the scientific method edit Main article Epistemological anarchism Paul Feyerabend rejected any prescriptive methodology at all He rejected Lakatos s argument for ad hoc hypothesis arguing that science would not have progressed without making use of any and all available methods to support new theories He rejected any reliance on a scientific method along with any special authority for science that might derive from such a method 85 He said that if one is keen to have a universally valid methodological rule epistemological anarchism or anything goes would be the only candidate 86 For Feyerabend any special status that science might have derives from the social and physical value of the results of science rather than its method 87 Sokal and Bricmont edit In their book Fashionable Nonsense from 1997 published in the UK as Intellectual Impostures the physicists Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont criticised falsifiability 88 They include this critique in the Intermezzo chapter where they expose their own views on truth in contrast to the extreme epistemological relativism of postmodernism Even though Popper is clearly not a relativist Sokal and Bricmont discuss falsifiability because they see postmodernist epistemological relativism as a reaction to Popper s description of falsifiability and more generally to his theory of science 89 See also editBlack swan theory Theory of response to surprise events Contingency philosophy Status of propositions that are neither always true nor always false Defeasible reasoning Reasoning that is rationally compelling though not deductively valid Deniable encryption Encryption techniques where an adversary cannot prove that the plaintext data exists claim that a ciphertext decrypts to a particular plaintext can be falsified by possible decryption to another potential plaintext Fallibilism Philosophical principle Metaphysical solipsism Variety of philosophical idealism Methodological solipsism Philosophical razor Principle that allows one to eliminate unlikely explanations Mike Alder Newton s Flaming Laser Sword Occam s razor Philosophical problem solving principle Philosophy of mathematics Plausible deniability Ability to deny responsibility Pragmatic maxim Precambrian rabbit Evolutionary biology hypothetical posed by J B S Haldane Raven paradox Paradox arising from the question of what constitutes evidence for a statement Russell s teapot Analogy devised by Bertrand Russell Scientific method Interplay between observation experiment and theory in science Adversarial collaboration research collaboration by scientists with opposing viewsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Experimentum crucis Critical experiment Explanatory power Ability of a theory to explain a subject Hypothetico deductive model Proposed description of the scientific method Models of scientific inquiry Philosophy of SciencePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Predictive power Ability of a scientific theory to generate testable predictions Reproducibility Aspect of scientific research Statistical hypothesis testing Method of statistical inferencePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Superseded scientific theories Obsolete theories in natural philosophy and natural historyPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Theory ladenness in philosophy of science the degree to which an observation is affected by the theoretical presuppositions held by the investigatorPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Scientific skepticism Position of questioning the veracity of claims that lack empirical evidence Superdeterminism Class of theories in quantum mechanics Tautology logic In logic a statement which is always true Trial and error Method of problem solvingNotes edit a b Popper discusses the notion of imaginary state of affairs in the context of scientific realism in Popper 1972 Chap 2 Sec 5 emphasis added H uman language is essentially descriptive and argumentative and an unambiguous description is always realistic it is of something of some state of affairs which may be real or imaginary Thus if the state of affairs is imaginary then the description is simply false and its negation is a true description of reality in Tarski s sense He continues emphasis added Tarski s theory more particularly makes clear just what fact a statement P will correspond to if it corresponds to any fact namely the fact that p a false statement P is false not because it corresponds to some odd entity like a non fact but simply because it does not correspond to any fact it does not stand in the peculiar relation of correspondence to a fact to anything real though it stands in a relation like describes to the spurious state of affairs that p Popper wanted the main text of the 1959 English version The Logic of Scientific Discovery to conform to the original thus refused to make substantial corrections and only added notes and appendices and marked them with an asterisk see Popper 1959 Translators note a b c Thornton 2016 sec 3 Popper has always drawn a clear distinction between the logic of falsifiability and its applied methodology The logic of his theory is utterly simple if a single ferrous metal is unaffected by a magnetic field it cannot be the case that all ferrous metals are affected by magnetic fields Logically speaking a scientific law is conclusively falsifiable although it is not conclusively verifiable Methodologically however the situation is much more complex no observation is free from the possibility of error consequently we may question whether our experimental result was what it appeared to be a b c Popper 1983 Introduction 1982 We must distinguish two meanings of the expressions falsifiable and falsifiability 1 Falsifiable as a logical technical term in the sense of the demarcation criterion of falsifiability This purely logical concept falsifiable in principle one might say rests on a logical relation between the theory in question and the class of basic statements or the potential falsifiers described by them 2 Falsifiable in the sense that the theory in question can definitively or conclusively or demonstrably be falsified demonstrably falsifiable I have always stressed that even a theory which is obviously falsifiable in the first sense is never falsifiable in this second sense For this reason I have used the expression falsifiable as a rule only in the first technical sense In the second sense I have as a rule spoken not of falsifiability but rather of falsification and of its problems a b Popper 1983 Introduction 1982 Although the first sense refers to the logical possibility of a falsification in principle the second sense refers to a conclusive practical experimental proof of falsity But anything like conclusive proof to settle an empirical question does not exist An entire literature rests on the failure to observe this distinction For a discussion related to this lack of distinction see Rosende 2009 p 142 All swans are white is often chosen as an example of a falsifiable statement because for some 1500 years the black swan existed in the European imagination as a metaphor for that which could not exist Had the presumption concerning black swans in this metaphor be right the statement would still have been falsifiable The falsifiability criterion is formulated in terms of basic statements or observation statements without requiring that we know which ones of these observation statements correspond to actual facts These basic statements break the symmetry while being purely logical concepts Falsifiability does not require falsification A past present and even a future falsification would be a problematic requirement it cannot be achieved because definitive rigorous falsifications are impossible and if a theory nevertheless met this requirement it would not be much better than a falsified theory Popper s argument is that inductive inference is a fallacy I hold with Hume that there simply is no such logical entity as an inductive inference or that all so called inductive inferences are logically invalid 90 4 Popper 1983 chap 1 sec 3 It seems that almost everybody believes in induction believes that is that we learn by the repetition of observations Even Hume in spite of his great discovery that a natural law can neither be established nor made probable by induction continued to believe firmly that animals and men do learn through repetition through repeated observations as well as through the formation of habits or the strengthening of habits by repetition And he upheld the theory that induction though rationally indefensible and resulting in nothing better than unreasoned belief was nevertheless reliable in the main more reliable and useful at any rate than reason and the processes of reasoning and that experience was thus the unreasoned result of a more or less passive accumulation of observations As against all this I happen to believe that in fact we never draw inductive inferences or make use of what are now called inductive procedures Rather we always discover regularities by the essentially different method of trial and error Popper 1959 part I chap 2 sec 11 I dispense with the principle of induction not because such a principle is as a matter of fact never used in science but because I think that it is not needed that it does not help us and that it even gives rise to inconsistencies Popper 1962 p 35 As for Adler I was much impressed by a personal experience Once in 1919 I reported to him a case which to me did not seem particularly Adlerian but which he found no difficulty in analysing in terms of his theory of inferiority feelings although he had not even seen the child Slightly shocked I asked him how he could be so sure Because of my thousandfold experience he replied whereupon I could not help saying And with this new case I suppose your experience has become thousand and one fold Thornton 2007 p 3 However a theory that has successfully withstood critical testing is thereby corroborated and may be regarded as being preferable to falsified rivals In the case of rival unfalsified theories for Popper the higher the informative content of a theory the better it is scientifically because every gain in content brings with it a commensurate gain in predictive scope and testability Popper 1959 p 19 Various objections might be raised against the criterion of demarcation here proposed In the first place it may well seem somewhat wrong headed to suggest that science which is supposed to give us positive information should be characterized as satisfying a negative requirement such as refutability However I shall show in sections 31 to 46 that this objection has little weight since the amount of positive information about the world which is conveyed by a scientific statement is the greater the more likely it is to clash because of its logical character with possible singular statements Not for nothing do we call the laws of nature laws the more they prohibit the more they say Feigl 1978 Karl Popper an Austrian born British philosopher of science in his Logik der Forschung 1935 The Logic of Scientific Discovery insisted that the meaning criterion should be abandoned and replaced by a criterion of demarcation between empirical scientific and transempirical nonscientific metaphysical questions and answers a criterion that according to Popper is to be testability Popper 1972 Sec 1 9 Quite apart from Hume s psychological theory of induction I felt that psychology should be regarded as a biological discipline and especially that any psychological theory of the acquisition of knowledge should be so regarded Now if we transfer to human and animal psychology the method that consists in choosing the best tested theory among conjectured theories we arrive clearly at the well known method of trial and error elimination Popper 1959 Sec 85 What I have here in mind is not a picture of science as a biological phenomenon I have in mind its epistemological aspects Popper 1959 pp 7 8 This latter is concerned not with questions of fact Kant s quid facti but only with questions of justification or validity Kant s quid juris Its questions are of the following kind Can a statement be justified And if so how Is it testable Is it logically dependent on certain other statements Or does it perhaps contradict them In order that a statement may be logically examined in this way it must already have been presented to us Someone must have formulated it and submitted it to logical examination Popper 1972 Sec 1 8 The fundamental difference between my approach and the approach for which I long ago introduced the label inductivist is that I lay stress on negative arguments such as negative instances or counter examples refutations and attempted refutations in short criticism a b Popper 1974 p 1005 Newton s theory would equally be contradicted if the apples from one of my or Newton s apple trees were to rise from the ground without there being a whirling about and begin to dance round the branches of the apple tree from which they had fallen In a spirit of criticism Watkins Watkins1984 Sec 8 52 liked to refer to invisible strings instead of some abstract law to explain this kind of evidence against Newton s Gravity The requirement that the language must be empirical is known in the literature as the material requirement For example see Nola amp Sankey 2014 pp 256 268 and Shea 2020 Sec 2 c This requirement says that the statements that describe observations the basic statements must be intersubjectively verifiable a b In Popper s description of the scientific procedure of testing as explained by Thornton see Thornton 2016 Sec 4 there is no discussion of factual observations except in those tests that compare the theory with factual observations but in these tests too the procedure is mostly logical and involves observations that are only logical constructions Popper 1959 pp 9 10 We may if we like distinguish four different lines along which the testing of a theory could be carried out First there is the logical comparison of the conclusions among themselves by which the internal consistency of the system is tested Secondly there is the investigation of the logical form of the theory with the object of determining whether it has the character of an empirical or scientific theory or whether it is for example tautological Thirdly there is the comparison with other theories chiefly with the aim of determining whether the theory would constitute a scientific advance should it survive our various tests And finally there is the testing of the theory by way of empirical applications of the conclusions which can be derived from it Here too the procedure of testing turns out to be deductive With the help of other statements previously accepted certain singular statements which we may call predictions are deduced from the theory especially predictions that are easily testable or applicable From among these statements those are selected which are not derivable from the current theory and more especially those which the current theory contradicts Popper 1959 p 9 According to the view that will be put forward here the method of critically testing theories and selecting them according to the results of tests always proceeds on the following lines From a new idea put up tentatively and not yet justified in any way an anticipation a hypothesis a theoretical system or what you will conclusions are drawn by means of logical deduction These conclusions are then compared with one another and with other relevant statements so as to find what logical relations such as equivalence derivability compatibility or incompatibility exist between them In practice technologies change When the interpretation of a theory is modified by an improved technological interpretation of some properties the new theory can be seen as the same theory with an enlarged scope For example Herbert Keuth de Keuth 2005 p 43 wrote But Popper s falsifiability or testability criterion does not presuppose that a definite distinction between testable and non testable statement is possible technology changes Thus a hypotheses that was first untestable may become testable later on Popper 1959 section 7 page 21 If falsifiability is to be at all applicable as a criterion of demarcation then singular statements must be available which can serve as premisses in falsifying inferences Our criterion therefore appears only to shift the problem to lead us back from the question of the empirical character of theories to the question of the empirical character of singular statements Yet even so something has been gained For in the practice of scientific research demarcation is sometimes of immediate urgency in connection with theoretical systems whereas in connection with singular statements doubt as to their empirical character rarely arises It is true that errors of observation occur and that they give rise to false singular statements but the scientist scarcely ever has occasion to describe a singular statement as non empirical or metaphysical a b Popper 1962 p 387 Before using the terms basic and basic statement I made use of the term empirical basis meaning by it the class of all those statements which may function as tests of empirical theories that is as potential falsifiers In introducing the term empirical basis my intention was partly to give an ironical emphasis to my thesis that the empirical basis of our theories is far from firm that it should be compared to a swamp rather than to solid ground This perspective can be found in any text on model theory For example see Ebbinghaus 2017 Popper put as an example of falsifiable statement with failed falsifications Einstein s equivalence principle See Popper 1983 Introduction sec I Einstein s principle of proportionality of inert and passively heavy mass This equivalence principle conflicts with many potential falsifiers events whose observation is logically possible Yet despite all attempts the experiments by Eotvos more recently refined by Rickle to realize such a falsification experimentally the experiments have so far corroborated the principle of equivalence Fisher 1930 p 34 Since m measures fitness to survive by the objective fact of representation in future generations For example see Cruzan 2018 p 156 Muehlenbein 2010 p 21 or Ridley 2003 website complement Popper 1980 p 611 It does appear that some people think that I denied scientific character to the historical sciences such as palaeontology or the history of the evolution of life on Earth This is a mistake and I here wish to affirm that these and other historical sciences have in my opinion scientific character their hypotheses can in many cases be tested If the criteria to identify an angel was simply to observe large wings then this angel does not have large wings would be a logical contradiction and thus not a basic statement anyway Popper 1983 Introduction xx This theory All human actions are egotistic motivated by self interest is widely held it has variants in behaviourism psychoanalysis individual psychology utilitarianism vulgar marxism religion and sociology of knowledge Clearly this theory with all its variants is not falsifiable no example of an altruistic action can refute the view that there was an egotistic motive hidden behind it a b Popper 1974 p 1038 A s indeed is the case in Maxwell s example when existential statements are verified this is done by means of stronger falsifiable statements What this means is this Whenever a pure existential statement by being empirically confirmed appears to belong to empirical science it will in fact do so not on its own account but by virtue of being a consequence of a corroborated falsifiable theory Keuth 2005 p 46 T he existential quantifier in the symbolized version of Every solid has a melting point is not inevitable rather this statement is actually a negligent phrasing of what we really mean Darwin 1869 pp 72 I have called this principle by which each slight variation if useful is preserved by the term natural selection in order to mark its relation to man s power of selection But the expression often used by Mr Herbert Spencer of the Survival of the Fittest is more accurate and is sometimes equally convenient Thompson 1981 pp 52 53 Introduction For several years evolutionary theory has been under attack from critics who argue that the theory is basically a tautology The tautology is said to arise from the fact that evolutionary biologists have no widely accepted way to independently define survival and fitness That the statement the fit survive is tautological is important because if the critics are correct in their analysis the tautology renders meaningless much of contemporary evolutionary theorizing The definition of key evolutionary concepts in terms of natural selection runs the risk of making evolutionary theory a self contained logical system which is isolated from the empirical world No meaningful empirical prediction can be made from one side to the other side of these definitions One cannot usefully predict that nature selects the fittest organism since the fittest organism is by definition that which nature selects Waddington 1959 pp 383 384 Darwin s major contribution was of course the suggestion that evolution can be explained by the natural selection of random variations Natural selection which was at first considered as though it were a hypothesis that was in need of experimental or observational confirmation turns out on closer inspection to be a tautology a statement of an inevitable although previously unrecognized relation It states that the fittest individuals in a population defined as those which leave most offspring will leave most offspring Once the statement is made its truth is apparent This fact in no way reduces the magnitude of Darwin s achievement only after it was clearly formulated could biologists realize the enormous power of the principle as a weapon of explanation Popper 1994 p 90 If more especially we accept that statistical definition of fitness which defines fitness by actual survival then the theory of the survival of the fittest becomes tautological and irrefutable Thompson 1981 p 53 Introduction Even if it did not make a tautology of evolution theory the use of natural selection as a descriptive concept would have serious drawbacks While it is mathematically tractable and easy to model in the laboratory the concept is difficult to operationalize in the field For field biologists it is really a hypothetical entity Clear unambiguous instances of the operation of natural selection are difficult to come by and always greeted with great enthusiasm by biologists Kettlewell 1959 the case of the peppered moths Shepherd 1960 Thus although the concept has much to recommend it as an explanatory one it seems an overly abstract formulation on which to base a descriptive science Popper 1978 p 342 However Darwin s own most important contribution to the theory of evolution his theory of natural selection is difficult to test There are some tests even some experimental tests and in some cases such as the famous phenomenon known as industrial melanism we can observe natural selection happening under our very eyes as it were Nevertheless really severe tests of the theory of natural selection are hard to come by much more so than tests of otherwise comparable theories in physics or chemistry Popper 1995 Chap 15 sec III page 101 here In Marx s view it is vain to expect that any important change can be achieved by the use of legal or political means a political revolution can only lead to one set of rulers giving way to another set a mere exchange of the persons who act as rulers Only the evolution of the underlying essence the economic reality can produce any essential or real change a social revolution Popper 1962 p 37 In some of its earlier formulations for example in Marx s analysis of the character of the coming social revolution their predictions were testable and in fact falsified Yet instead of accepting the refutations the followers of Marx re interpreted both the theory and the evidence in order to make them agree In this way they rescued the theory from refutation but they did so at the price of adopting a device which made it irrefutable They thus gave a conventionalist twist to the theory and by this stratagem they destroyed its much advertised claim to scientific status Thornton 2016 Sec 2 The Marxist account of history too Popper held is not scientific although it differs in certain crucial respects from psychoanalysis For Marxism Popper believed had been initially scientific in that Marx had postulated a theory which was genuinely predictive However when these predictions were not in fact borne out the theory was saved from falsification by the addition of ad hoc hypotheses which made it compatible with the facts By this means Popper asserted a theory which was initially genuinely scientific degenerated into pseudo scientific dogma Surveys were mailed to all active U S district court judges in November 1998 N 619 303 usable surveys were obtained for a response rate of 51 See Krafka 2002 p 9 in archived pdf The Daubert case and subsequent cases that used it as a reference including General Electric Co v Joiner and Kumho Tire Co v Carmichael resulted in an amendment of the Federal Rules of Evidence see Rules of Evidence 2017 p 15 Rule 702 and Rule 702 Notes 2011 The Kumho Tire Co v Carmichael case and other cases considered the original Daubert factors but the amended rule rule 702 even though it is often referred to as the Daubert standard does not include the original Daubert factors or mention falsifiability or testability and neither does the majority opinion delivered by William Rehnquist in the General Electric Co v Joiner case Not to be confused with David Kaye law professor United Nations special rapporteur David H Kaye is distinguished professor of law at Penn State Law Kaye 2005 p 2 several courts have treated the abstract possibility of falsification as sufficient to satisfy this aspect of the screening of scientific evidence This essay challenges these views It first explains the distinct meanings of falsification and falsifiability It then argues that while the Court did not embrace the views of any specific philosopher of science inquiring into the existence of meaningful attempts at falsification is an appropriate and crucial consideration in admissibility determinations Consequently it concludes that recent opinions substituting mere falsifiability for actual empirical testing are misconstruing and misapplying Daubert As Lakatos pointed out scientists decide among themselves using critical discussions which potential falsifiers are accepted There is no strict constraints on which method can be used to take the decision Popper 1962 p 111 Against the view here developed one might be tempted to object following Duhem 28 that in every test it is not only the theory under investigation which is involved but also the whole system of our theories and assumptions in fact more or less the whole of our knowledge so that we can never be certain which of all these assumptions is refuted But this criticism overlooks the fact that if we take each of the two theories between which the crucial experiment is to decide together with all this background knowledge as indeed we must then we decide between two systems which differ only over the two theories which are at stake It further overlooks the fact that we do not assert the refutation of the theory as such but of the theory together with that background knowledge parts of which if other crucial experiments can be designed may indeed one day be rejected as responsible for the failure Thus we may even characterize a theory under investigation as that part of a vast system for which we have if vaguely an alternative in mind and for which we try to design crucial tests These four decisions are mentioned in Lakatos 1978 pp 22 25 A fifth decision is mentioned later by Lakatos to allow even more theories to be falsified Popper 1959 p 91 It may now be possible for us to answer the question How and why do we accept one theory in preference to others The preference is certainly not due to anything like a experiential justification of the statements composing the theory it is not due to a logical reduction of the theory to experience We choose the theory which best holds its own in competition with other theories the one which by natural selection proves itself the fittest to survive This will be the one which not only has hitherto stood up to the severest tests but the one which is also testable in the most rigorous way A theory is a tool which we test by applying it and which we judge as to its fitness by the results of its applications Lakatos says that Popper is not the sophisticated falsificationist that he describes but not the naive falsificationist either see Lakatos 1978 In an earlier paper I distinguished three Poppers Popper0 Popper1 and Popper2 Popper0 is the dogmatic falsificationist Popper1 is the naive falsificationist Popper2 the sophisticated falsificationist The real Popper has never explained in detail the appeal procedure by which some accepted basic statements may be eliminated Thus the real Popper consists of Popper1 together with some elements of Popper2 Popper clearly distinguishes between the methodological rules and the rules of pure logic see Popper 1959 p 32 Methodological rules are here regarded as conventions They might be described as the rules of the game of empirical science They differ from the rules of pure logic Popper 1959 p 27 The theory of method in so far as it goes beyond the purely logical analysis of the relations between scientific statements is concerned with the choice of methods with decisions about the way in which scientific statements are to be dealt with Zahar wrote a brief summary of Lakatos s position regarding Popper s philosophy He says see Zahar 1983 p 149 The important question of the possibility of a genuine logic of scientific discovery is the main divergence between Lakatos and Popper About Popper s view Zahar wrote see Zahar 1983 p 169 To repeat Popper offers a Darwinian account of the progress of knowledge Progress is supposed to result negatively from the elimination by natural selection of defective alternatives There is no genuine logic of discovery only a psychology of invention juxtaposed to a methodology which appraises fully fledged theories In Lakatos terminology the term falsified has a different meaning for a naive falsificationist than for a sophisticated falsificationist Putting aside this confusing terminological aspect the key point is that Lakatos wanted a formal logical procedure to determine which theories we must keep see Lakatos 1978 p 32 For the naive falsificationist a theory is falsified by a fortified observational statement which conflicts with it or which he decides to interpret as conflicting with it For the sophisticated falsificationist a scientific theory T is falsified if and only if another theory T has been proposed with the following characteristics 1 T has excess empirical content over T that is it predicts novel facts that is facts improbable in the light of or even forbidden by 2 T explains the previous success of T that is all the unrefuted content of T is included within the limits of observational error in the content of T and 3 some of the excess content of T is corroborated In his critique of Popper see Kuhn 1970 p 15 Kuhn says that the methodological rules are not sufficient to provide a logic of discovery rules or conventions like the following Once a hypothesis has been proposed and tested and has proved its mettle it may not be allowed to drop out without good reason A good reason may be for instance replacement of the hypothesis by another which is better testable or the falsification of one of the consequences of the hypothesis Rules like these and with them the entire logical enterprise described above are no longer simply syntactic in their import They require that both the epistemological investigator and the research scientist be able to relate sentences derived from a theory not to other sentences but to actual observations and experiments This is the context in which Sir Karl s term falsification must function and Sir Karl is entirely silent about how it can do so Popper gives an example of a methodological rule that uses corroborations see Popper 1959 p 32 Once a hypothesis has been proposed and tested and has proved its mettle it may not be allowed to drop out without good reason A good reason may be for instance replacement of the hypothesis by another which is better testable or the falsification of one of the consequences of the hypothesis Popper 1959 section 23 1st paragraph The requirement of falsifiability which was a little vague to start with has now been split into two parts The first the methodological postulate cf section 20 can hardly be made quite precise The second the logical criterion is quite definite as soon as it is clear which statements are to be called basic Popper 1983 Introduction V The hope further to strengthen this theory of the aims of science by the definition of verisimilitude in terms of truth and of content was unfortunately vain But the widely held view that scrapping this definition weakens my theory is completely baseless Morris amp Brown 2021 Sec 3 Hume explicitly models his account of the fundamental principles of the mind s operations the principles of association on the idea of gravitational attraction Russell 1948 Part VI Sec II We have therefore to seek for principles other than induction such that given certain data not of the form this A is a B the generalization all A is B has a finite probability Given such principles and given a generalization to which they apply induction can make the generalization increasingly probable with a probability which approaches certainty as a limit when the number of favourable instances in indefinitely increased a b c Zahar 1983 p 167 Lakatos urged Popper explicitly to adopt some inductive principle which would synthetically link verisimilitude to corroboration Lakatos 1978 Sec 1 1 I shall try to explain and further strengthen this stronger Popperian position which I think may escape Kuhn s strictures and present scientific revolutions not as constituting religious conversions but rather as rational progress Lakatos 1978 Sec 1 2 b The other alternative is to replace the naive versions of methodological falsificationism by a sophisticated version which would give a new rationale of falsification and thereby rescue methodology and the idea of scientific progress a b Lakatos 1978 pp 116 117 The methodology of research programmes was criticized both by Feyerabend and by Kuhn According to Kuhn Lakatos must specify criteria which can be used at the time to distinguish a degenerative from a progressive research programme and so on Otherwise he has told us nothing at all Actually I do specify such criteria But Kuhn probably meant that my standards have practical force only if they are combined with a time limit what looks like a degenerating problem shift may be the beginning of a much longer period of advance Since I specify no such time limit Feyerabend concludes that my standards are no more than verbal ornament A related point was made by Musgrave in a letter containing some major constructive criticisms of an earlier draft in which he demanded that I specify for instance at what point dogmatic adherence to a programme ought to be explained externally rather than internally Let me try to explain why such objections are beside the point One may rationally stick to a degenerating programme until it is overtaken by a rival and even after What one must not do is to deny its poor public record Both Feyerabend and Kuhn conflate methodological appraisal of a programme with firm heuristic advice about what to do It is perfectly rational to play a risky game what is irrational is to deceive oneself about the risk This does not mean as much licence as might appear for those who stick to a degenerating programme For they can do this mostly only in private a b Watkins 1989 p 6 Although Paul Feyerabend and Alan Musgrave evaluated Lakatos s view in opposite ways they agreed about its nature Feyerabend hailed it as an anarchism in disguise Feyerabend Against Method 1975 while Musgrave rather deplored the fact that Lakatos had gone a long way towards epistemological anarchism Musgrave 1976 p 458 Musgrave added Lakatos deprived his standards of practical force and adopted a position of anything goes Musgrave 1976 p 478 a b Musgrave 1976 p 458 My third criticism concerns the question of whether Lakatos s methodology is in fact a methodology in the old fashioned sense whether that is it issues in advice to scientists I shall argue that Lakatos once had sound views on this matter but was led mistakenly in my opinion to renounce them In renouncing them he has gone a long way towards epistemological anarchism a b Feyerabend 1978 p 15 Lakatos realized and admitted that the existing standards of rationality standards of logic included are too restrictive and would have hindered science had they been applied with determination He therefore permitted the scientist to violate them However he demanded that research programmes show certain features in the long run they must be progressive In Chapter 16 of Against Method and in my essay On the Critique of Scientific Reason Feyerabend 1978b p 120 I have argued that this demand no longer restricts scientific practice Any development agrees with it The demand standard is rational but it is also empty Rationalism and the demands of reason have become purely verbal in the theory of Lakatos See also Feyerabend 1981 p 148 a b Couvalis 1997 pp 74 75 There is a sense in which Feyerabend is right Lakatos fails to give precise mechanical rules for when a theory has been finally falsified Yet an appropriate question might be whether such rules are possible or necessary to make science rational There are however many rough and ready rules the application of which has to be learned in practical contexts This does not mean that precise rules cannot be used in certain contexts but we need to use our judgement to decide when those rules are to be used Lakatos 1978 p 112 It should be pointed out however that the methodology of scientific research programmes has more teeth than Duhem s conventionalism instead of leaving it to Duhem s unarticulated common sense to judge when a framework is to be abandoned I inject some hard Popperian elements into the appraisal of whether a programme progresses or degenerates or of whether one is overtaking another That is I give criteria of progress and stagnation within a programme and also rules for the elimination of whole research programmes Zahar Zahar 1983 p 168 recognizes that formal rules in a methodology cannot be rational Yet at the level of the technology that is at the practical level he says scientists must nevertheless take decisions Popper s methodology does not specify formal rules but non rational decisions will still have to be taken He concludes that Popper and Lakatos differ only over the levels at which they locate non rationality in science Lakatos at the level of an inductive principle which justifies technology and Popper at the lower level of technology itself Popper 1959 Sec Elimination of Psychologism Einstein wrote see Yehuda 2018 p 41 The supreme task of the physicist is to arrive at those universal elementary laws from which the cosmos can be built up by pure deduction There is no logical path to these laws only intuition resting on sympathetic understanding of experience can reach them Einstein wrote see Feldman amp Williams 2007 p 151 and 1 I am convinced that we can discover by means of purely mathematical constructions the concepts and laws connecting them with each other which furnish the key to the understanding of natural phenomena Experience remains of course the sole criterion of the physical utility of a mathematical construction But the creative principle resides in mathematics In a certain sense therefore I hold it true that pure thought can grasp reality as the ancients dreamed Kuhn 1974 p 802 I suggest then that Sir Karl has characterized the entire scientific enterprise in terms that apply only to its occasional revolutionary parts His emphasis is natural and common the exploits of a Copernicus or Einstein make better reading than those of a Brahe or Lorentz Sir Karl would not be the first if he mistook what I call normal science for an intrinsically uninteresting enterprise Nevertheless neither science nor the development of knowledge is likely to be understood if research is viewed exclusively through the revolutions it occasionally produces Watkins 1970 p 28 Thus we have the following clash the condition which Kuhn regards as the normal and proper condition of science is a condition which if it actually obtained Popper would regard as unscientific a state of affairs in which critical science had contracted into defensive metaphysics Popper has suggested that the motto of science should be Revolution in permanence For Kuhn it seems a more appropriate maxim would be Not nostrums but normalcy Popper 1994 pp 155 156 It is my view that the methods of the natural as well as the social sciences can be best understood if we admit that science always begins and ends with problems The progress of science lies essentially in the evolution of its problems And it can be gauged by the increasing refinement wealth fertility and depth of its problems The growth of knowledge always consists in correcting earlier knowledge Historically science begins with pre scientific knowledge with pre scientific myths and pre scientific expectations And these in turn have no beginnings Popper 1962 p 37 B y making their interpretations and prophecies sufficiently vague astrologers were able to explain away anything that might have been a refutation of the theory had the theory and the prophecies been more precise In order to escape falsification they destroyed the testability of their theory It is a typical soothsayer s trick to predict things so vaguely that the predictions can hardly fail that they become irrefutable Kuhn 1970 pp 7 8 Astrology is Sir Karl s most frequently cited example of a pseudo science He Popper says By making their interpretations and prophecies sufficiently vague they astrologers were able to explain away anything that might have been a refutation of the theory had the theory and the prophecies been more precise In order to escape falsification they destroyed the testability of the theory Those generalizations catch something of the spirit of the astrological enterprise But taken at all literally as they must be if they are to provide a demarcation criterion they are impossible to support The history of astrology during the centuries when it was intellectually reputable records many predictions that categorically failed Not even astrology s most convinced and vehement exponents doubted the recurrence of such failures Astrology cannot be barred from the sciences because of the form in which its predictions were cast Abbreviated references edit Mayo 2018 Sec 2 3 Harding 1976 p X Mayo 2018 pp 86 87 a b Grayling 2019 p 397 a b Popper 1972 Miller 1994 p 1 Uebel 2019 Creath 2017 MacLennan 2021 Chap 8 1 Thornton 2007 a b Popper 1959 Sec 85 Watkins 1984 Sec 7 2 a b c d Johnson Laird 2006 Chap 13 Popper 1959 Sec 2 Popper 1972 App 1 III Popper 1972 App 1 II a b Popper 1972 Sec 1 9 Popper 1972 p 30 Gelman amp Shalizi 2013 Chalmers 2013 p 62 Popper 1959 Sec 68 Popper 1959 p 32 Shea 2020 Sec 2 c Popper 1959 sec 13 15 28 Lakatos 1978 p 22 a b Popper 1959 pp 64 65 Popper 1959 p 65 Footnote 1 Simon amp Groen 1973 Simon 1985 a b Rynasiewicz 1983 Sec 2 Rudge 2005 Theobald 2006 Wallis 2005 Dawkins 1995 Dawkins 1986 Dienes 2008 pp 18 19 a b Maxwell 1974 pp 294 295 a b Keuth 2005 pp 44 45 Leitgeb amp Carus 2021 Sec 8 1 a b c d Maxwell 1974 p 299 a b Popper 1974 p 1038 Maxwell 1974 p 295 Elgin amp Sober 2017 Einstein 2010 Popper 1995 Chap 15 a b Smith 2000 p 12 McLean v Arkansas 1982 Daubert 1993 Krafka 2002 p 17 in archived pdf Lakatos 1978 p 25 Wilkinson 2013 Chiasma 2017 Wigmore 2017 Lehmann 1993 p 201 a b Mayo 2018 p 82 Hawthorne 2018 Sec 3 2 Hawthorne 2018 Sec 2 1 Howson 2000 p 88 Gelman amp Shalizi 2013 pp 26 27 Mayo 2018 p 83 Mayo 2018 p 86 Lakatos 1978 pp 12 30 Pera 1989 p 362 Lakatos 1974 Popper 1974 Note 70a Andersson 1994 Chap 3 Understanding Science 2021 Lakatos 1978 pp 96 97 Fine 2019 Morris amp Brown 2021 Sec 4 a b Henderson 2018 Russell 1998 Chap VI Russell 1948 Part VI Sec II Watkins 1984 Sec 8 5 Chalmers 2013 p 59 Chalmers 2013 p 60 Thornton 2016 Sec 5 Lakatos 1978 p 36 Popper 1962 Chap 1 Sec IX Miller 1994 p 7 Garcia 2006 p 30 Lakatos 1974 p 245 Popper 1974 p 1010 Kuhn 1996 Martin 2017 Feyerabend 1993 Broad 1979 Sokal amp Bricmont 1998 Miller 2000 Greenland 1998 p 545 References editAndersson Gunnar 1994 Criticism and the History of Science Kuhn s Lakatos s and Feyerabend s Criticisms of Critical Rationalism Leiden New York Koln E J Brill Andersson Gunnar 2016 The Problem of the Empirical Basis in Critical Rationalism In Shearmur Jeremy Stokes Geoffrey eds The Cambridge Companion to Popper Cambridge Companions to Philosophy Cambridge UK New York Cambridge University Press pp 125 142 doi 10 1017 cco9781139046503 005 ISBN 978 1 139 04650 3 OCLC 925355415 Bundle up your hypotheses Understanding Science how science really works Berkeley University of California 18 April 2022 Broad W J 2 November 1979 Paul Feyerabend Science and the Anarchist Science 206 4418 534 537 Bibcode 1979Sci 206 534B doi 10 1126 science 386510 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 386510 Chalmers Alan F 2013 What Is This Thing Called Science 4th ed Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 62466 038 2 OCLC 847985678 Chiasma 2017 On falsifiability and the null hypothesis in discussions and debates Creath Richard 2017 First published 2011 Logical Empiricism In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2017 ed Archived 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2020 Kuhn Thomas S 1970 Reprinted Kuhn 1974 Logic of Discovery or Psychology of Research In Lakatos Imre Musgrave Alan eds Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge Proceedings of the International Colloquium in the Philosophy of Science Vol 4 London Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 07826 1 OCLC 94900 Kuhn Thomas S 1974 First published Kuhn 1970 Logic of Discovery or Psychology of Research In Schilpp Paul Arthur ed The Philosophy of Karl Popper Vol II Illinois Open Court pp 798 819 ISBN 0 87548 142 6 OCLC 2580491 Kuhn Thomas S 1996 First published 1962 The Structure of Scientific Revolutions 3rd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 45807 6 OCLC 34548541 Lakatos Imre 1974 Reprinted Lakatos 1978 pp 139 167 Popper on demarcation and induction In Schilpp Paul Arthur ed The Philosophy of Karl Popper Vol I Illinois Open Court pp 241 273 ISBN 0 87548 141 8 Lakatos Imre 1978 Worrall John Curry Gregory eds The Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes Volume 1 Philosophical Papers 1980 ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 28031 1 Lehmann Erich Leo 1993 The Fisher Neyman Pearson Theories of Testing Hypotheses One Theory or Two Journal of the American Statistical Association 88 424 1242 249 doi 10 2307 2291263 JSTOR 2291263 Leitgeb Hannes Carus Andre 2021 Rudolf Carnap In Edward N Zalta ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 11 September 2021 MacLennan Bruce J 2021 Word and Flux The Discrete and the Continuous in Computation Philosophy and Psychology Volume I From Pythagoras to the Digital Computer The Intellectual Roots of Symbolic Artificial Intelligence with a Summary of Volume II Continuous Theories of Knowledge PDF Book in preparation comments invited Martin Eric 2017 Science and Ideology Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 4 November 2019 Retrieved 4 November 2019 Maxwell Grover 1974 Corroboration without demarcation In Schilpp Paul Arthur ed The Philosophy of Karl Popper Vol I 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Introduction Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 49348 8 Pennock Robert T 2000 Tower of Babel The Evidence Against the New Creationism A Bradford Book MIT Press doi 10 7551 mitpress 6870 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 262 66165 2 OCLC 39262003 Pera Marcello 1989 Methodological Sophisticationism A Degenerating Project In Gavroglou Kōstas Goudaroulis Yorgos Nicolacopoulos Pantelis eds Imre Lakatos and Theories of Scientific Change Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Vol 111 Dordrecht Boston Kluwer Academic Publishers pp 169 187 doi 10 1007 978 94 009 3025 4 ISBN 90 277 2766 X OCLC 17982125 Popper Karl 1959 The Logic of Scientific Discovery 2002 pbk 2005 ebook ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 27844 7 Popper Karl 1962 Conjectures and Refutations The Growth of Scientific Knowledge 2002 ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 28594 0 excerpt Science as Falsification Popper Karl 1972 Objective Knowledge An Evolutionary Approach 2003 ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 875024 6 Popper Karl 1974 Replies to my Critics In Schilpp Paul Arthur ed The Philosophy of Karl Popper Vol II Illinois Open Court pp 961 1197 ISBN 0 87548 142 6 Popper Karl 1978 Natural Selection and the Emergence of Mind Dialectica 32 3 4 339 355 doi 10 1111 j 1746 8361 1978 tb01321 x JSTOR 42970324 Popper Karl 1980 Evolution Letters New Scientist Vol 87 no 1215 Reed Business Information p 611 Popper Karl 1983 Originally written in 1962 Bartley III ed Realism and the Aim of Science From the Postscript to The Logic of Scientific Discovery London New York Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203713969 ISBN 0 415 08400 8 OCLC 25130665 Popper Karl 1994 Notturno Mark A ed The Myth of the Framework In Defence of Science and Rationality London New York Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203535806 ISBN 978 0 415 11320 5 OCLC 30156902 Popper Karl 1995 Original version in 1945 The Open Society and Its Enemies Routledge Ridley Mark 2003 Evolution 3rd ed Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1 4051 0345 0 Rosende Diego L 2009 Popper on Refutability Some Philosophical and Historical Questions In Parusnikova Zuzana Cohen Robert S eds Rethinking Popper Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Springer pp 135 154 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 9338 8 11 ISBN 978 1 4020 9337 1 OCLC 260208425 Rudge David W 2005 The Beauty of Kettlewell s Classic Experimental Demonstration of Natural Selection BioScience 55 4 369 375 doi 10 1641 0006 3568 2005 055 0369 TBOKCE 2 0 CO 2 Ruse Michael 2010 Science and Spirituality Making Room for Faith in the Age of Science Cambridge UK New York Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511676338 ISBN 978 0 521 75594 8 OCLC 366517438 Russell Bertrand 1998 First published 1912 The Problems of Philosophy Oxford University Press Russell Bertrand 1948 First published 1923 Human Knowledge Its Scope and Limits George Allen and Uunwin Rynasiewicz Robert A 1983 Falsifiability and the Semantic Eliminability of Theoretical Languages The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 34 3 225 241 doi 10 1093 bjps 34 3 225 JSTOR 687321 Retrieved 3 May 2021 Shea Brendan 2020 Karl Popper Philosophy of Science Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Simon Herbert A Groen Guy J 1973 Ramsey Eliminability and the Testability of Scientific Theories The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 24 4 367 380 doi 10 1093 bjps 24 4 367 JSTOR 686617 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Simon Herbert A 1985 Quantification of Theoretical Terms and the Falsifiability of Theories The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 36 3 291 298 doi 10 1093 bjps 36 3 291 JSTOR 687572 Retrieved 5 May 2021 Smith Peter K 2000 Philosophie of science and its relevance for the social sciences In Burton Dawn ed Research Training for Social Scientists A Handbook for Postgraduate Researchers Los Angeles Sage Publications pp 5 20 ISBN 0 7619 6351 0 Archived from the original on 18 August 2016 Retrieved 27 January 2016 Sokal Alan D Bricmont Jean 1998 Published in French 1997 Fashionable Nonsense Postmodern Intellectuals Abuse of Science New York Picador ISBN 0 312 19545 1 OCLC 39605994 Thompson N S 1981 Toward a falsifiable theory of evolution In Bateson P G Klopfer P H eds Perspectives in ethology Vol 4 New York Plenum Publishing pp 51 73 Theobald Douglas L 2006 29 Evidences for Macroevolution The Scientific Case for Common Descent Version 2 87 The Talk Origins Archive Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 21 April 2020 Thornton Stephen 2007 Popper Basic Statements and the Quine Duhem Thesis Yearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society 9 Thornton Stephen 2016 First published 1997 Karl Popper In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2017 ed Archived from the original on 18 March 2019 Retrieved 19 June 2018 Uebel Thomas 2019 First published 2006 Vienna Circle In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2017 ed Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Urban Patricia 2016 First published 2012 Archaeological Theory in Practice Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 57619 2 Waddington C H 1959 Evolutionary Adaptation Perspectives in Biology and Medicine Johns Hopkins University Press 2 4 379 401 doi 10 1353 pbm 1959 0027 ISSN 1529 8795 PMID 13667389 S2CID 9434812 Wallis Claudia 7 August 2005 The Evolution Wars Time PMID 16116981 Archived from the original on 9 September 2019 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Watkins John 1970 Against Normal Science In Lakatos Imre Musgrave Alan eds Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge Proceedings of the International Colloquium in the Philosophy of Science Vol 4 London Cambridge University Press pp 25 37 ISBN 0 521 07826 1 OCLC 94900 Watkins John W N 1984 Science and Scepticism Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 07294 9 Watkins John 1989 The Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes A Retrospect Imre Lakatos and Theories of Scientific Change Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Vol 3 Dordrecht Springer pp 3 13 doi 10 1007 978 94 009 3025 4 ISBN 978 94 010 7860 3 Wigmore Ivy 2017 Falsifiability Wilkinson Mick 2013 Testing the null hypothesis the forgotten legacy of Karl Popper PDF Journal of Sports Sciences 31 9 919 920 doi 10 1080 02640414 2012 753636 PMID 23249368 S2CID 205512848 Yehuda Elkana 2018 Einstein and God Einstein for the 21st Century His Legacy in Science Art and Modern Culture Princeton University Press pp 35 47 ISBN 978 0 691 17790 8 Zahar E G 1983 The Popper Lakatos Controversy in the Light of Die Beiden Grundprobleme Der Erkenntnistheorie The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 34 2 149 171 doi 10 1093 bjps 34 2 149 JSTOR 687447 Further reading editBinns Peter March 1978 The Supposed Asymmetry between Falsification and Verification Dialectica 32 1 29 40 doi 10 1111 j 1746 8361 1978 tb01300 x JSTOR 42971398 Blaug Mark 1992 The Methodology of Economics Or How Economists Explain Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43678 6 Chapman Siobhan 2008 Language and Empiricism After the Vienna Circle Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 52476 7 Corfield David Scholkopf Bernhard Vapnik Vladimir July 2009 Falsificationism and Statistical Learning Theory Comparing the Popper and Vapnik Chervonenkis Dimensions Journal for General Philosophy of Science 40 1 51 58 doi 10 1007 s10838 009 9091 3 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0013 C3E9 3 JSTOR 40390670 Dardashti R Dawid R Thebault K eds 2019 Why Trust a Theory Epistemology of Fundamental Physics Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108671224 ISBN 978 1 108 67122 4 S2CID 219957500 De Pierris Graciela Friedman Michael 4 June 2008 Kant and Hume on Causality In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2013 ed Archived from the original on 17 March 2019 Retrieved 18 June 2018 Derksen A A November 1985 The Alleged Unity of Popper s Philosophy of Science Falsifiability as Fake Cement Philosophical Studies 48 3 313 336 doi 10 1007 BF01305393 JSTOR 4319794 S2CID 171003093 Duhem Pierre 1906 La theorie physique son objet et sa structure in French Chevalier amp Riviere Duhem Pierre 1991 First published 1954 The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 02524 X Elena Santiago F Lenski Richard E 2003 Evolution experiments with microorganisms the dynamics and genetic bases of adaptation Nature Reviews Genetics 4 6 457 469 doi 10 1038 nrg1088 PMID 12776215 S2CID 209727 Elkana Yehuda 2018 Einstein and God In Galison P L Holton G Schweber S S eds Einstein for the 21st Century His Legacy in Science Art and Modern Culture Princeton University Press Ferguson Christopher J Heene Moritz 2012 A Vast Graveyard of Undead Theories Publication Bias and Psychological Science s Aversion to the Null Perspectives on Psychological Science 7 6 555 561 doi 10 1177 1745691612459059 PMID 26168112 S2CID 6100616 Garcia Duque Carlos Emilio 2002 Four Central Issues in Popper s Theory of Science Thesis University of Florida OCLC 51946605 Gawronski Bertram Bodenhausen Galen V 7 January 2015 12 November 2014 Theory Evaluation Theory and Explanation in Social Psychology Guilford Publications ISBN 978 1 4625 1848 7 Archived from the original on 7 June 2020 Retrieved 5 June 2020 Hume David 1896 First published 1739 A Treatise of Human Nature PDF Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 779563 Falsifiability at the Internet Archive Archived from the original PDF on 10 August 2019 Johansson Lars Goran 2015 Theories About the Development of Science Philosophy of Science for Scientists Cham Springer pp 106 108 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 26551 3 6 ISBN 978 3 319 26549 0 OCLC 923649072 Kant Immanuel 1787 Guyer Paul Wood Allen W eds Critique of Pure Reason The Cambridge edition of the works of Immanuel Kant 1998 ed Cambridge UK New York Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9780511804649 ISBN 978 0 521 35402 8 OCLC 36438781 Kasavin Ilya Blinov Evgeny 2012 Hume and Contemporary Philosophy Legacy and Prospects In Ilya Kasavin ed David Hume and Contemporary Philosophy Cambridge Scholars pp 1 9 ISBN 978 1 4438 4131 3 OCLC 817562250 Archived from the original on 17 September 2016 Koterski Artur 2011 The Rise and Fall of Falsificationism in the Light of Neurath s Criticism1 In Dieks Dennis Geert Bernardus Johan Gonzalez Wenceslao J Hartmann Stephan Uebel Thomas Weber Marcel eds Explanation Prediction and Confirmation Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective Vol 2 New York Springer pp 487 498 doi 10 1007 978 94 007 1180 8 33 ISBN 978 94 007 1179 2 OCLC 706920414 Lange Marc 2008 Hume and the Problem of Induction In Gabbay Dov M Woods John eds Inductive Logic Handbook of the History of Logic Vol 10 Amsterdam Boston Elsevier pp 43 91 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 504 2727 ISBN 978 0 444 52936 7 OCLC 54111232 Maxwell Nicholas 2017 Popper Kuhn Lakatos and Aim Oriented Empiricism Karl Popper Science and Enlightenment London UCL Press pp 42 89 doi 10 14324 111 9781787350397 ISBN 978 1 78735 039 7 OCLC 1004353997 McGinn Colin 2002 Looking for a Black Swan The New York Review of Books 21 November 2002 46 50 Archived from the original on 14 June 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Merritt David February 2017 Cosmology and convention Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics Elsevier 57 41 52 arXiv 1703 02389 Bibcode 2017SHPMP 57 41M doi 10 1016 j shpsb 2016 12 002 S2CID 119401938 Miller David 2006 Out of Error Further Essays on Critical Rationalism Aldershot UK Burlington VT Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 5068 3 OCLC 57641308 Miller David 2014 Some Hard Questions for Critical Rationalism Discusiones Filosoficas 15 24 15 40 ISSN 0124 6127 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 11 June 2018 Niiniluoto Ilkka 1984 Chapter first published 1978 Notes on Popper as Follower of Whewell and Peirce Is Science Progressive Synthese Library Vol 177 Dordrecht Boston D Reidel pp 18 60 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 1978 0 3 ISBN 90 277 1835 0 OCLC 10996819 Ploch Stefan 2003 Metatheoretical problems in phonology with Occam s Razor and non ad hoc ness Living on the Edge 28 Papers in Honour of Jonathan Kaye Studies in Generative Grammar Vol 62 Popper Karl 1976 Bartley III William W ed Unended Quest An Intellectual Autobiography 2002 ed London and New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 28589 5 Archived from the original on 5 October 2020 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Popper Karl 26 February 1982 Les chemins de la verite L Express va plus loin avec Karl Popper L Express Interview Interviewed by S Lannes and A Boyer pp 82 88 a href Template Cite interview html title Template Cite interview cite interview a CS1 maint date and year link Popper Karl 1989 Zwei Bedeutungen von Falsifizierbarkeit Two meanings of falsifiability In Seiffert H Radnitzky G eds Handlexikon der Wissenschaftstheorie Dictionary of epistemology in German 1992 ed Munchen Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag ISBN 3 423 04586 8 Popper Karl 1992 Originally written in 1962 Bartley III W W ed Quantum Theory and the Schism in Physics From the Postscript to the Logic of Scientific Discovery 2005 ed London New York Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203713990 ISBN 0 415 09112 8 OCLC 26159482 Popper Karl 2009 Manuscript 1933 Published in German 1979 Eggers Hansen Troels ed The Two Fundamental Problems of the Theory of Knowledge Translated by Pickel Andreas London New York Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203371107 ISBN 978 0 415 39431 4 OCLC 212627154 Rescher Nicholas 1977 Confirmationism vs Falsificationism Dialectics A Controversy Oriented Approach to the Theory of Knowledge Albany State University of New York Press pp 119 123 ISBN 0 87395 372 X OCLC 3034395 Rescher Nicholas 1989 Generality Preference and Falsificationism Cognitive Economy The Economic Dimension of the Theory of Knowledge Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press pp 118 123 ISBN 0 8229 3617 8 OCLC 19264362 Watkins John 1974 The Unity of Popper s Thought In Schilpp Paul Arthur ed The Philosophy of Karl Popper Vol I Illinois Open Court pp 371 412 ISBN 0 87548 141 8 OCLC 2580491 Woit Peter 2018 Beyond Falsifiability Not even wrong External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of falsifiability at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Falsifiability amp oldid 1206538666, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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