Does the spherical Earth cast doubt upon Popper’s claims about scientific theories never been confirmed? — Craig
It could be that the Earth we see as approximately spherical is actually a 3D cross-section of an object that is actually a 4D hypersphere. We can never rule out more elaborate theories. But we don't need to. We just say 'this is the best hypothesis we have at present, and it has been working very well, so we'll keep on using that unless or until it stops working well'.Does the spherical Earth cast doubt upon Popper’s claims about scientific theories never been confirmed? — Craig
It could be that the Earth we see as approximately spherical is actually a 3D cross-section of an object that is actually a 4D hypersphere. We can never rule out more elaborate theories. But we don't need to. We just say 'this is the best hypothesis we have at present, and it has been working very well, so we'll keep on using that unless or until it stops working well'. — andrewk
My problem is, how does this relate to the theory of a spherical Earth? It seems here we have a theory that survived falsification and has gone on to become fact through confirmation via observing the spherical shape of the Earth thanks to space exploration. — Craig
Does the spherical Earth cast doubt upon Popper’s claims about scientific theories never been confirmed? — Craig
We can't directly observe that a planet, or any object, is spherical because we see in 2D and spheres are 3D. We have reams of data that are consistent with the theory that the Earth is approximately spherical so we adopt that theory.There is no "theory of a spherical earth". The earth literally is (approximately) spherical. The theory is the explanation of that phenomenon, and there have been a couple of those. — Inis
We can't directly observe that a planet, or any object, is spherical because we see in 2D and spheres are 3D. We have reams of data that are consistent with the theory that the Earth is approximately spherical so we adopt that theory.
I set the boundary between observations and theories much lower down - towards the very raw input end. — andrewk
Only if one insists that deduction is the only valid form of logic. Charles Sanders Peirce recognized that retroduction (or abduction) and induction are also valid, just not in the same way as deduction. The argument outlined above is a valid retroduction, which is the first step in any scientific inquiry, with some qualifications that Peirce included in his own formulation of it:The scientific method (TSM) is the fallacy of affirming the consequent.
1) If hypothesis A is true then predictions B, C, D, etc. are true
2. Predictions B, C, D, etc. are true
Therefore
3) Hypothesis A is true
Is the above the correct blueprint for all scientific arguments?
If it is then the fallacy of affirming the consequent has been committed. — TheMadFool
1) If hypothesis A is true then predictions B, C, D, etc. are true
2. Predictions B, C, D, etc. are true
Therefore
3) Hypothesis A is true
Is the above the correct blueprint for all scientific arguments? — TheMadFool
My problem is, how does this relate to the theory of a spherical Earth? — Craig
We can't directly observe that a planet, or any object, is spherical because we see in 2D and spheres are 3D. We have reams of data that are consistent with the theory that the Earth is approximately spherical so we adopt that theory. — andrewk
Popper's position, and mine, is that when a hypothesis graduates to a higher state it becomes a theory. There is no higher state than a theory. To say that a theory is not a fact is not to question it, it is to acknowledge the proper accepted meaning of the word theory in the scientific community.These theories seem to go from being a controversial hypothesis to a fact of reality, and anyone who questions them is a crackpot. — Inis
Popper's position, and mine, is that when a hypothesis graduates to a higher state it becomes a theory. There is no higher state than a theory. To say that a theory is not a fact is not to question it, it is to acknowledge the proper accepted meaning of the word theory in the scientific community. — andrewk
A fact is a raw observation — andrewk
Does the spherical Earth cast doubt upon Popper’s claims about scientific theories never been confirmed? — Craig
Does the spherical Earth cast doubt upon Popper’s claims about scientific theories never been confirmed? — Craig
Just wondering, did you mean 'To claim' rather than 'To deny'? Surely most people would deny that claim, on the ground that our confidence is almost certainly greater now than it would have been in 1000 BCE.To deny that our confidence in the proposition that the Earth is round is the same as it has always been, despite everything we have learned, is to deny reality. — SophistiCat
Does the spherical Earth cast doubt upon Popper’s claims about scientific theories never been confirmed? — Craig
1. Identify problem (observational findings) — TheMadFool
2. Construct hypothesis — TheMadFool
3. Test hypothesis. This involves making and checking predictions — TheMadFool
4. Revise hypothesis if hypothesis fails to account for all observations — TheMadFool
5. Identify further implications — TheMadFool
However, I'm specifically talking about step 3 of the process -testing the hypothesis. In this case we do commit the logical fallacy of affirming the consequent as below:
1. If hypothesis A is true then predictions B, C, D,...are true
2. Predictions B, C, D,... are true
So,
3. Hypothesis A is true
What are your comments on this? — TheMadFool
That the Earth is spherical is a scientific hypothesis. There were two competing hypotheses:
1. Earth is flat
2. Earth is spherical — TheMadFool
Scientific hypotheses are causal arguments. Causal arguments are inductive. — TheMadFool
They are empirical statements, but "it is raining" is also an empirical statement, and no one claims that is a scientific theory.
Popper argued that scientific theories take the logical form of "strictly universal statements", and none of the "singular statements" above fall into that category.
Big shout out to Eratosthenes. — Inis
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