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Hypothesis

A hypothesis (pl.: hypotheses) is a proposed explanation for a phenomenon. For a hypothesis to be a scientific hypothesis, the scientific method requires that one can test it. Scientists generally base scientific hypotheses on previous observations that cannot satisfactorily be explained with the available scientific theories. Even though the words "hypothesis" and "theory" are often used interchangeably, a scientific hypothesis is not the same as a scientific theory. A working hypothesis is a provisionally accepted hypothesis proposed for further research[1] in a process beginning with an educated guess or thought.[2]

The hypothesis of Andreas Cellarius, showing the planetary motions in eccentric and epicyclical orbits.

A different meaning of the term hypothesis is used in formal logic, to denote the antecedent of a proposition; thus in the proposition "If P, then Q", P denotes the hypothesis (or antecedent); Q can be called a consequent. P is the assumption in a (possibly counterfactual) What If question. The adjective hypothetical, meaning "having the nature of a hypothesis", or "being assumed to exist as an immediate consequence of a hypothesis", can refer to any of these meanings of the term "hypothesis".

Uses

In its ancient usage, hypothesis referred to a summary of the plot of a classical drama. The English word hypothesis comes from the ancient Greek word ὑπόθεσις hypothesis whose literal or etymological sense is "putting or placing under" and hence in extended use has many other meanings including "supposition".[1][3][4][5]

In Plato's Meno (86e–87b), Socrates dissects virtue with a method used by mathematicians,[6] that of "investigating from a hypothesis".[7] In this sense, 'hypothesis' refers to a clever idea or to a convenient mathematical approach that simplifies cumbersome calculations.[8] Cardinal Bellarmine gave a famous example of this usage in the warning issued to Galileo in the early 17th century: that he must not treat the motion of the Earth as a reality, but merely as a hypothesis.[9]

In common usage in the 21st century, a hypothesis refers to a provisional idea whose merit requires evaluation. For proper evaluation, the framer of a hypothesis needs to define specifics in operational terms. A hypothesis requires more work by the researcher in order to either confirm or disprove it. In due course, a confirmed hypothesis may become part of a theory or occasionally may grow to become a theory itself. Normally, scientific hypotheses have the form of a mathematical model.[10] Sometimes, but not always, one can also formulate them as existential statements, stating that some particular instance of the phenomenon under examination has some characteristic and causal explanations, which have the general form of universal statements, stating that every instance of the phenomenon has a particular characteristic.

In entrepreneurial setting, a hypothesis is used to formulate provisional ideas about the attributes of products or business models. The formulated hypothesis is then evaluated, where the hypothesis is proven to be either "true" or "false" through a verifiability- or falsifiability-oriented experiment.[11][12]

Any useful hypothesis will enable predictions by reasoning (including deductive reasoning). It might predict the outcome of an experiment in a laboratory setting or the observation of a phenomenon in nature. The prediction may also invoke statistics and only talk about probabilities. Karl Popper, following others, has argued that a hypothesis must be falsifiable, and that one cannot regard a proposition or theory as scientific if it does not admit the possibility of being shown to be false. Other philosophers of science have rejected the criterion of falsifiability or supplemented it with other criteria, such as verifiability (e.g., verificationism) or coherence (e.g., confirmation holism). The scientific method involves experimentation to test the ability of some hypothesis to adequately answer the question under investigation. In contrast, unfettered observation is not as likely to raise unexplained issues or open questions in science, as would the formulation of a crucial experiment to test the hypothesis. A thought experiment might also be used to test the hypothesis.

In framing a hypothesis, the investigator must not currently know the outcome of a test or that it remains reasonably under continuing investigation. Only in such cases does the experiment, test or study potentially increase the probability of showing the truth of a hypothesis.[13]: pp17, 49–50  If the researcher already knows the outcome, it counts as a "consequence" — and the researcher should have already considered this while formulating the hypothesis. If one cannot assess the predictions by observation or by experience, the hypothesis needs to be tested by others providing observations. For example, a new technology or theory might make the necessary experiments feasible.

Scientific hypothesis

A trial solution to a problem is commonly referred to as a hypothesis—or, often, as an "educated guess"[14][2]—because it provides a suggested outcome based on the evidence. However, some scientists reject the term "educated guess" as incorrect. Experimenters may test and reject several hypotheses before solving the problem.

According to Schick and Vaughn,[15] researchers weighing up alternative hypotheses may take into consideration:

  • Testability (compare falsifiability as discussed above)
  • Parsimony (as in the application of "Occam's razor", discouraging the postulation of excessive numbers of entities)
  • Scope – the apparent applicability of the hypothesis to multiple known phenomena
  • Fruitfulness – the prospect that the hypothesis may explain further phenomena in the future
  • Conservatism – the degree of "fit" with existing recognized knowledge-systems.

Working hypothesis

A working hypothesis is a hypothesis that is provisionally accepted as a basis for further research[16] in the hope that a tenable theory will be produced, even if the hypothesis ultimately fails.[17] Like all hypotheses, a working hypothesis is constructed as a statement of expectations, which can be linked to the exploratory research purpose in empirical investigation. Working hypotheses are often used as a conceptual framework in qualitative research.[18][19]

The provisional nature of working hypotheses makes them useful as an organizing device in applied research. Here they act like a useful guide to address problems that are still in a formative phase.[20]

In recent years, philosophers of science have tried to integrate the various approaches to evaluating hypotheses, and the scientific method in general, to form a more complete system that integrates the individual concerns of each approach. Notably, Imre Lakatos and Paul Feyerabend, Karl Popper's colleague and student, respectively, have produced novel attempts at such a synthesis.

Hypotheses, concepts and measurement

Concepts in Hempel's deductive-nomological model play a key role in the development and testing of hypotheses. Most formal hypotheses connect concepts by specifying the expected relationships between propositions. When a set of hypotheses are grouped together, they become a type of conceptual framework. When a conceptual framework is complex and incorporates causality or explanation, it is generally referred to as a theory. According to noted philosopher of science Carl Gustav Hempel,

An adequate empirical interpretation turns a theoretical system into a testable theory: The hypothesis whose constituent terms have been interpreted become capable of test by reference to observable phenomena. Frequently the interpreted hypothesis will be derivative hypotheses of the theory; but their confirmation or disconfirmation by empirical data will then immediately strengthen or weaken also the primitive hypotheses from which they were derived.[21]: 36 

Hempel provides a useful metaphor that describes the relationship between a conceptual framework and the framework as it is observed and perhaps tested (interpreted framework). "The whole system floats, as it were, above the plane of observation and is anchored to it by rules of interpretation. These might be viewed as strings which are not part of the network but link certain points of the latter with specific places in the plane of observation. By virtue of those interpretative connections, the network can function as a scientific theory."[21]: 36  Hypotheses with concepts anchored in the plane of observation are ready to be tested. In "actual scientific practice the process of framing a theoretical structure and of interpreting it are not always sharply separated, since the intended interpretation usually guides the construction of the theoretician".[21]: 33  It is, however, "possible and indeed desirable, for the purposes of logical clarification, to separate the two steps conceptually".[21]: 33 

Statistical hypothesis testing

When a possible correlation or similar relation between phenomena is investigated, such as whether a proposed remedy is effective in treating a disease, the hypothesis that a relation exists cannot be examined the same way one might examine a proposed new law of nature. In such an investigation, if the tested remedy shows no effect in a few cases, these do not necessarily falsify the hypothesis. Instead, statistical tests are used to determine how likely it is that the overall effect would be observed if the hypothesized relation does not exist. If that likelihood is sufficiently small (e.g., less than 1%), the existence of a relation may be assumed. Otherwise, any observed effect may be due to pure chance.

In statistical hypothesis testing, two hypotheses are compared. These are called the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis. The null hypothesis is the hypothesis that states that there is no relation between the phenomena whose relation is under investigation, or at least not of the form given by the alternative hypothesis. The alternative hypothesis, as the name suggests, is the alternative to the null hypothesis: it states that there is some kind of relation. The alternative hypothesis may take several forms, depending on the nature of the hypothesized relation; in particular, it can be two-sided (for example: there is some effect, in a yet unknown direction) or one-sided (the direction of the hypothesized relation, positive or negative, is fixed in advance).[22]

Conventional significance levels for testing hypotheses (acceptable probabilities of wrongly rejecting a true null hypothesis) are .10, .05, and .01. The significance level for deciding whether the null hypothesis is rejected and the alternative hypothesis is accepted must be determined in advance, before the observations are collected or inspected. If these criteria are determined later, when the data to be tested are already known, the test is invalid.[23]

The above procedure is actually dependent on the number of the participants (units or sample size) that are included in the study. For instance, to avoid having the sample size be too small to reject a null hypothesis, it is recommended that one specify a sufficient sample size from the beginning. It is advisable to define a small, medium and large effect size for each of a number of important statistical tests which are used to test the hypotheses.[24]

Honours

Mount Hypothesis in Antarctica is named in appreciation of the role of hypothesis in scientific research.

List

Several hypotheses have been put forth, in different subject areas:

  • Astronomical hypotheses
  • Authorship debates
  • Biological hypotheses
  • Documentary hypothesis
  • Hypothetical documents
  • Hypothetical impact events
  • Hypothetical laws
  • Linguistic theories and hypotheses
  • Meteorological hypotheses
  • Hypothetical objects
  • Origin hypotheses of ethnic groups
  • Hypothetical processes
  • Hypothetical spacecraft
  • Statistical hypothesis testing
  • Hypothetical technology

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Hilborn, Ray; Mangel, Marc (1997). The ecological detective: confronting models with data. Princeton University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-691-03497-3. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  2. ^ a b "In general we look for a new law by the following process. First we guess it. ...", —Richard Feynman (1965) The Character of Physical Law p.156
  3. ^ Supposition is itself a Latinate analogue of hypothesis as both are compound words constructed from words meaning respectively "under, below" and "place, placing, putting" in either language, Latin or Greek.
  4. ^ Harper, Douglas. "hypothesis". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  5. ^ ὑπόθεσις. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  6. ^ Wilbur R. Knorr, "Construction as existence proof in ancient geometry", p. 125, as selected by Jean Christianidis (ed.), Classics in the history of Greek mathematics, Kluwer.
  7. ^ Gregory Vlastos, Myles Burnyeat (1994) Socratic studies, Cambridge ISBN 0-521-44735-6, p. 1
  8. ^ "Neutral hypotheses, those of which the subject matter can never be directly proved or disproved, are very numerous in all sciences." — Morris Cohen and Ernest Nagel (1934) An introduction to logic and scientific method p. 375. New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Company.
  9. ^ "Bellarmine (Ital. Bellarmino), Roberto Francesco Romolo", Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition.: 'Bellarmine did not proscribe the Copernican system ... all he claimed was that it should be presented as a hypothesis until it should receive scientific demonstration.'   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hypothesis". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 14 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 208.
  10. ^ Crease, Robert P. (2008) The Great Equations ISBN 978-0-393-06204-5, p.112 lists the conservation of energy as an example of accounting a constant of motion. Hypothesized by Sadi Carnot, truth demonstrated by James Prescott Joule, proven by Emmy Noether.
  11. ^ Blank, Steve (May 2013). "Harvard Business Review (2013) "Why Lean Startup Changes Everything"". Harvard Business Review. from the original on 2021-10-28. Retrieved 2015-07-16.
  12. ^ "Lean Startup Circle "What is Lean Startup?"". from the original on 2015-07-16. Retrieved 2015-07-16.
  13. ^ Popper 1959
  14. ^ "When it is not clear under which law of nature an effect or class of effect belongs, we try to fill this gap by means of a guess. Such guesses have been given the name conjectures or hypotheses.", Hans Christian Ørsted(1811) "First Introduction to General Physics" ¶18. Selected Scientific Works of Hans Christian Ørsted, ISBN 0-691-04334-5 p.297
  15. ^ Schick, Theodore; Vaughn, Lewis (2002). How to think about weird things: critical thinking for a New Age. Boston: McGraw-Hill Higher Education. ISBN 0-7674-2048-9.
  16. ^ Oxford Dictionary of Sports Science & Medicine. Eprint 2011-11-27 at the Wayback Machine via Answers.com.
  17. ^ See in "hypothesis", Century Dictionary Supplement, v. 1, 1909, New York: The Century Company. Reprinted, v. 11, p. 616 (via Internet Archive) of the Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, 1911.

    hypothesis [...]—Working hypothesis, a hypothesis suggested or supported in some measure by features of observed facts, from which consequences may be deduced which can be tested by experiment and special observations, and which it is proposed to subject to an extended course of such investigation, with the hope that, even should the hypothesis thus be overthrown, such research may lead to a tenable theory.

  18. ^ Patricia M. Shields, Hassan Tajalli (2006). "Intermediate Theory: The Missing Link in Successful Student Scholarship". Journal of Public Affairs Education. 12 (3): 313–334. doi:10.1080/15236803.2006.12001438. S2CID 141201197.
  19. ^ Patricia M. Shields (1998). "Pragmatism As a Philosophy of Science: A Tool For Public Administration". In Jay D. White (ed.). Research in Public Administration. Vol. 4. pp. 195–225 [211]. ISBN 1-55938-888-9.
  20. ^ Patricia M. Shields and Nandhini Rangarajan. 2013. A Playbook for Research Methods: Integrating Conceptual Frameworks and Project Management[permanent dead link]. Stillwater, OK: New Forums Press. pp. 109–157
  21. ^ a b c d Hempel, C. G. (1952). Fundamentals of Concept Formation in Empirical Science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  22. ^ Altman. DG., Practical Statistics for Medical Research, CRC Press, 1990, Section 8.5,
  23. ^ Mellenbergh, G.J.(2008). Chapter 8: Research designs: Testing of research hypotheses. In H.J. Adèr & G.J. Mellenbergh (eds.) (with contributions by D.J. Hand), Advising on Research Methods: A consultant's companion (pp. 183–209). Huizen, The Netherlands: Johannes van Kessel Publishing
  24. ^ Altman. DG., Practical Statistics for Medical Research, CRC Press, 1990, Section 15.3,

Bibliography

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of hypothesis at Wiktionary
  •   Learning materials related to Hypothesis at Wikiversity
  •   Media related to Hypotheses at Wikimedia Commons
  • "How science works", Understanding Science by the University of California Museum of Paleontology.

hypothesis, other, uses, disambiguation, hypothetical, disambiguation, hypothesis, hypotheses, proposed, explanation, phenomenon, hypothesis, scientific, hypothesis, scientific, method, requires, that, test, scientists, generally, base, scientific, hypotheses,. For other uses see Hypothesis disambiguation and Hypothetical disambiguation A hypothesis pl hypotheses is a proposed explanation for a phenomenon For a hypothesis to be a scientific hypothesis the scientific method requires that one can test it Scientists generally base scientific hypotheses on previous observations that cannot satisfactorily be explained with the available scientific theories Even though the words hypothesis and theory are often used interchangeably a scientific hypothesis is not the same as a scientific theory A working hypothesis is a provisionally accepted hypothesis proposed for further research 1 in a process beginning with an educated guess or thought 2 The hypothesis of Andreas Cellarius showing the planetary motions in eccentric and epicyclical orbits A different meaning of the term hypothesis is used in formal logic to denote the antecedent of a proposition thus in the proposition If P then Q P denotes the hypothesis or antecedent Q can be called a consequent P is the assumption in a possibly counterfactual What If question The adjective hypothetical meaning having the nature of a hypothesis or being assumed to exist as an immediate consequence of a hypothesis can refer to any of these meanings of the term hypothesis Contents 1 Uses 2 Scientific hypothesis 3 Working hypothesis 4 Hypotheses concepts and measurement 4 1 Statistical hypothesis testing 5 Honours 6 List 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksUsesIn its ancient usage hypothesis referred to a summary of the plot of a classical drama The English word hypothesis comes from the ancient Greek word ὑpo8esis hypothesis whose literal or etymological sense is putting or placing under and hence in extended use has many other meanings including supposition 1 3 4 5 In Plato s Meno 86e 87b Socrates dissects virtue with a method used by mathematicians 6 that of investigating from a hypothesis 7 In this sense hypothesis refers to a clever idea or to a convenient mathematical approach that simplifies cumbersome calculations 8 Cardinal Bellarmine gave a famous example of this usage in the warning issued to Galileo in the early 17th century that he must not treat the motion of the Earth as a reality but merely as a hypothesis 9 In common usage in the 21st century a hypothesis refers to a provisional idea whose merit requires evaluation For proper evaluation the framer of a hypothesis needs to define specifics in operational terms A hypothesis requires more work by the researcher in order to either confirm or disprove it In due course a confirmed hypothesis may become part of a theory or occasionally may grow to become a theory itself Normally scientific hypotheses have the form of a mathematical model 10 Sometimes but not always one can also formulate them as existential statements stating that some particular instance of the phenomenon under examination has some characteristic and causal explanations which have the general form of universal statements stating that every instance of the phenomenon has a particular characteristic In entrepreneurial setting a hypothesis is used to formulate provisional ideas about the attributes of products or business models The formulated hypothesis is then evaluated where the hypothesis is proven to be either true or false through a verifiability or falsifiability oriented experiment 11 12 Any useful hypothesis will enable predictions by reasoning including deductive reasoning It might predict the outcome of an experiment in a laboratory setting or the observation of a phenomenon in nature The prediction may also invoke statistics and only talk about probabilities Karl Popper following others has argued that a hypothesis must be falsifiable and that one cannot regard a proposition or theory as scientific if it does not admit the possibility of being shown to be false Other philosophers of science have rejected the criterion of falsifiability or supplemented it with other criteria such as verifiability e g verificationism or coherence e g confirmation holism The scientific method involves experimentation to test the ability of some hypothesis to adequately answer the question under investigation In contrast unfettered observation is not as likely to raise unexplained issues or open questions in science as would the formulation of a crucial experiment to test the hypothesis A thought experiment might also be used to test the hypothesis In framing a hypothesis the investigator must not currently know the outcome of a test or that it remains reasonably under continuing investigation Only in such cases does the experiment test or study potentially increase the probability of showing the truth of a hypothesis 13 pp17 49 50 If the researcher already knows the outcome it counts as a consequence and the researcher should have already considered this while formulating the hypothesis If one cannot assess the predictions by observation or by experience the hypothesis needs to be tested by others providing observations For example a new technology or theory might make the necessary experiments feasible Scientific hypothesisA trial solution to a problem is commonly referred to as a hypothesis or often as an educated guess 14 2 because it provides a suggested outcome based on the evidence However some scientists reject the term educated guess as incorrect Experimenters may test and reject several hypotheses before solving the problem According to Schick and Vaughn 15 researchers weighing up alternative hypotheses may take into consideration Testability compare falsifiability as discussed above Parsimony as in the application of Occam s razor discouraging the postulation of excessive numbers of entities Scope the apparent applicability of the hypothesis to multiple known phenomena Fruitfulness the prospect that the hypothesis may explain further phenomena in the future Conservatism the degree of fit with existing recognized knowledge systems Working hypothesisMain article Working hypothesis A working hypothesis is a hypothesis that is provisionally accepted as a basis for further research 16 in the hope that a tenable theory will be produced even if the hypothesis ultimately fails 17 Like all hypotheses a working hypothesis is constructed as a statement of expectations which can be linked to the exploratory research purpose in empirical investigation Working hypotheses are often used as a conceptual framework in qualitative research 18 19 The provisional nature of working hypotheses makes them useful as an organizing device in applied research Here they act like a useful guide to address problems that are still in a formative phase 20 In recent years philosophers of science have tried to integrate the various approaches to evaluating hypotheses and the scientific method in general to form a more complete system that integrates the individual concerns of each approach Notably Imre Lakatos and Paul Feyerabend Karl Popper s colleague and student respectively have produced novel attempts at such a synthesis Hypotheses concepts and measurementConcepts in Hempel s deductive nomological model play a key role in the development and testing of hypotheses Most formal hypotheses connect concepts by specifying the expected relationships between propositions When a set of hypotheses are grouped together they become a type of conceptual framework When a conceptual framework is complex and incorporates causality or explanation it is generally referred to as a theory According to noted philosopher of science Carl Gustav Hempel An adequate empirical interpretation turns a theoretical system into a testable theory The hypothesis whose constituent terms have been interpreted become capable of test by reference to observable phenomena Frequently the interpreted hypothesis will be derivative hypotheses of the theory but their confirmation or disconfirmation by empirical data will then immediately strengthen or weaken also the primitive hypotheses from which they were derived 21 36 Hempel provides a useful metaphor that describes the relationship between a conceptual framework and the framework as it is observed and perhaps tested interpreted framework The whole system floats as it were above the plane of observation and is anchored to it by rules of interpretation These might be viewed as strings which are not part of the network but link certain points of the latter with specific places in the plane of observation By virtue of those interpretative connections the network can function as a scientific theory 21 36 Hypotheses with concepts anchored in the plane of observation are ready to be tested In actual scientific practice the process of framing a theoretical structure and of interpreting it are not always sharply separated since the intended interpretation usually guides the construction of the theoretician 21 33 It is however possible and indeed desirable for the purposes of logical clarification to separate the two steps conceptually 21 33 Statistical hypothesis testing Main article Statistical hypothesis testing When a possible correlation or similar relation between phenomena is investigated such as whether a proposed remedy is effective in treating a disease the hypothesis that a relation exists cannot be examined the same way one might examine a proposed new law of nature In such an investigation if the tested remedy shows no effect in a few cases these do not necessarily falsify the hypothesis Instead statistical tests are used to determine how likely it is that the overall effect would be observed if the hypothesized relation does not exist If that likelihood is sufficiently small e g less than 1 the existence of a relation may be assumed Otherwise any observed effect may be due to pure chance In statistical hypothesis testing two hypotheses are compared These are called the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis The null hypothesis is the hypothesis that states that there is no relation between the phenomena whose relation is under investigation or at least not of the form given by the alternative hypothesis The alternative hypothesis as the name suggests is the alternative to the null hypothesis it states that there is some kind of relation The alternative hypothesis may take several forms depending on the nature of the hypothesized relation in particular it can be two sided for example there is some effect in a yet unknown direction or one sided the direction of the hypothesized relation positive or negative is fixed in advance 22 Conventional significance levels for testing hypotheses acceptable probabilities of wrongly rejecting a true null hypothesis are 10 05 and 01 The significance level for deciding whether the null hypothesis is rejected and the alternative hypothesis is accepted must be determined in advance before the observations are collected or inspected If these criteria are determined later when the data to be tested are already known the test is invalid 23 The above procedure is actually dependent on the number of the participants units or sample size that are included in the study For instance to avoid having the sample size be too small to reject a null hypothesis it is recommended that one specify a sufficient sample size from the beginning It is advisable to define a small medium and large effect size for each of a number of important statistical tests which are used to test the hypotheses 24 HonoursMount Hypothesis in Antarctica is named in appreciation of the role of hypothesis in scientific research ListMain category Hypotheses Several hypotheses have been put forth in different subject areas Astronomical hypotheses Authorship debates Biological hypotheses Documentary hypothesis Hypothetical documents Hypothetical impact events Hypothetical laws Linguistic theories and hypotheses Meteorological hypotheses Hypothetical objects Origin hypotheses of ethnic groups Hypothetical processes Hypothetical spacecraft Statistical hypothesis testing Hypothetical technologySee also nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Hypothesis Axiom Bold hypothesis Case study Conjecture Explanandum Hypothesis theory a research area in cognitive psychology Hypothetical question Logical positivism Operationalization Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica for Newton s position on hypotheses Reductionism Research design Sociology of scientific knowledge Theorem Hypothesis Thesis statementReferences a b Hilborn Ray Mangel Marc 1997 The ecological detective confronting models with data Princeton University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 691 03497 3 Retrieved 22 August 2011 a b In general we look for a new law by the following process First we guess it Richard Feynman 1965 The Character of Physical Law p 156 Supposition is itself a Latinate analogue of hypothesis as both are compound words constructed from words meaning respectively under below and place placing putting in either language Latin or Greek Harper Douglas hypothesis Online Etymology Dictionary ὑpo8esis Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Wilbur R Knorr Construction as existence proof in ancient geometry p 125 as selected by Jean Christianidis ed Classics in the history of Greek mathematics Kluwer Gregory Vlastos Myles Burnyeat 1994 Socratic studies Cambridge ISBN 0 521 44735 6 p 1 Neutral hypotheses those of which the subject matter can never be directly proved or disproved are very numerous in all sciences Morris Cohen and Ernest Nagel 1934 An introduction to logic and scientific method p 375 New York Harcourt Brace and Company Bellarmine Ital Bellarmino Roberto Francesco Romolo Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition Bellarmine did not proscribe the Copernican system all he claimed was that it should be presented as a hypothesis until it should receive scientific demonstration nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hypothesis Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 208 Crease Robert P 2008 The Great Equations ISBN 978 0 393 06204 5 p 112 lists the conservation of energy as an example of accounting a constant of motion Hypothesized by Sadi Carnot truth demonstrated by James Prescott Joule proven by Emmy Noether Blank Steve May 2013 Harvard Business Review 2013 Why Lean Startup Changes Everything Harvard Business Review Archived from the original on 2021 10 28 Retrieved 2015 07 16 Lean Startup Circle What is Lean Startup Archived from the original on 2015 07 16 Retrieved 2015 07 16 Popper 1959 When it is not clear under which law of nature an effect or class of effect belongs we try to fill this gap by means of a guess Such guesses have been given the name conjectures or hypotheses Hans Christian Orsted 1811 First Introduction to General Physics 18 Selected Scientific Works of Hans Christian Orsted ISBN 0 691 04334 5 p 297 Schick Theodore Vaughn Lewis 2002 How to think about weird things critical thinking for a New Age Boston McGraw Hill Higher Education ISBN 0 7674 2048 9 Oxford Dictionary of Sports Science amp Medicine Eprint Archived 2011 11 27 at the Wayback Machine via Answers com See in hypothesis Century Dictionary Supplement v 1 1909 New York The Century Company Reprinted v 11 p 616 via Internet Archive of the Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia 1911 hypothesis Working hypothesis a hypothesis suggested or supported in some measure by features of observed facts from which consequences may be deduced which can be tested by experiment and special observations and which it is proposed to subject to an extended course of such investigation with the hope that even should the hypothesis thus be overthrown such research may lead to a tenable theory Patricia M Shields Hassan Tajalli 2006 Intermediate Theory The Missing Link in Successful Student Scholarship Journal of Public Affairs Education 12 3 313 334 doi 10 1080 15236803 2006 12001438 S2CID 141201197 Patricia M Shields 1998 Pragmatism As a Philosophy of Science A Tool For Public Administration In Jay D White ed Research in Public Administration Vol 4 pp 195 225 211 ISBN 1 55938 888 9 Patricia M Shields and Nandhini Rangarajan 2013 A Playbook for Research Methods Integrating Conceptual Frameworks and Project Management permanent dead link Stillwater OK New Forums Press pp 109 157 a b c d Hempel C G 1952 Fundamentals of Concept Formation in Empirical Science Chicago University of Chicago Press Altman DG Practical Statistics for Medical Research CRC Press 1990 Section 8 5 Mellenbergh G J 2008 Chapter 8 Research designs Testing of research hypotheses In H J Ader amp G J Mellenbergh eds with contributions by D J Hand Advising on Research Methods A consultant s companion pp 183 209 Huizen The Netherlands Johannes van Kessel Publishing Altman DG Practical Statistics for Medical Research CRC Press 1990 Section 15 3 BibliographyPopper Karl R 1959 The Logic of Scientific Discovery 1934 1959 External links nbsp The dictionary definition of hypothesis at Wiktionary nbsp Learning materials related to Hypothesis at Wikiversity nbsp Media related to Hypotheses at Wikimedia Commons How science works Understanding Science by the University of California Museum of Paleontology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hypothesis amp oldid 1216408785, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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