Karl Popper proposed the solution to the problem of demarcation that is known as falsifiability. The problem with that is that the foundational axioms of science are unfalsifiable. Therefore, under this definition, all science is pseudoscience. I still think the idea of falsifiability is valuable to scientific understanding, but I have a proposition that builds upon that idea. If a claim is unfalsifiable, but the idea that the belief in its truth provides value is falsifiable, then it should still be regarded as science. I'm curious as to other peoples views on the concept of pseudoscience, certainty, as well as what I wrote above. — MonfortS26
Karl Popper proposed the solution to the problem of demarcation that is known as falsifiability. The problem with that is that the foundational axioms of science are unfalsifiable. Therefore, under this definition, all science is pseudoscience. — MonfortS26
This year, debates in physics circles took a worrying turn. Faced with difficulties in applying fundamental theories to the observed Universe, some researchers called for a change in how theoretical physics is done. They began to argue — explicitly — that if a theory is sufficiently elegant and explanatory, it need not be tested experimentally, breaking with centuries of philosophical tradition of defining scientific knowledge as empirical. We disagree. As the philosopher of science Karl Popper argued: a theory must be falsifiable to be scientific.
Chief among the 'elegance will suffice' advocates are some string theorists. Because string theory is supposedly the 'only game in town' capable of unifying the four fundamental forces, they believe that it must contain a grain of truth even though it relies on extra dimensions that we can never observe. Some cosmologists, too, are seeking to abandon experimental verification of grand hypotheses that invoke imperceptible domains such as the kaleidoscopic multiverse (comprising myriad universes), the 'many worlds' version of quantum reality (in which observations spawn parallel branches of reality) and pre-Big Bang concepts.
These unprovable hypotheses are quite different from those that relate directly to the real world and that are testable through observations — such as the standard model of particle physics and the existence of dark matter and dark energy. As we see it, theoretical physics risks becoming a no-man's-land between mathematics, physics and philosophy that does not truly meet the requirements of any.
Those prosecuting the case against are George Ellis and Joe Silk, who led with a paper called Defend the Integrity of Physics in December 2014. — Wayfarer
I don't think science has any foundational axioms.The problem with that is that the foundational axioms of science are unfalsifiable — MonfortS26
I don't think science has any foundational axioms. — andrewk
There is an objective reality — T Clark
Another big one is the belief that because natural laws have been true in the past, that they will continue to be true in the future — MonfortS26
That is not science, in fact most scientists wouldn't think about it, but I'm sure it's true.
It comes out of Kant. — Wayfarer
Or were you saying you don't think it's true? If so, it's not not true, it's metaphysics. — T Clark
If a claim is unfalsifiable, but the idea that the belief in its truth provides value is falsifiable, then it should still be regarded as science. — MonfortS26
Another big one is the belief that because natural laws have been true in the past, that they will continue to be true in the future — MonfortS26
Perhaps "good science" should be rooted in its consistent ability to predict future events instead of its ability to be falsifiable — MonfortS26
Off the top of my head. Not sure about all of these:
There is an objective reality
There is a relationship between a statement and objective reality called "truth."
To know something the following statements must be true 1) I believe the subject of knowledge exists 2) The subject of knowledge is true and 3) I am justified in believing the subject of knowledge is true.
Objective reality can be known by the procedures included in the scientific method. — T Clark
Consciousness does not contain physical properties and as such cannot be defined in physical terms, because consciousness is a feature of the brain and thus property dualism can be compatible to science. — TimeLine
I think I like where this is heading, but I could use some clarification. How about an example of a claim which is unfalsifiable, but the idea that the belief in its truth provides value is falsifiable. — T Clark
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