Definitions
Falsificationism
Karl Popper
Things to Know
Review
100

predictions that are not used in the construction of a theory, and that correctly predict aspects of a phenomenon that we were not already aware of.

Novel Predictions 

100

Observation that shows theory is false. 

Falsification 

100

When Was Karl Popper Born?

1902

100

What is the best way to test a theory?

Try and show it is false

100

What is the inference of a general law from particular instances.

Induction

200

Theory proven only when can observe phenomena.

Naïve inductivism

200

State of a theory that has shown to be false. 

Falsified

200

Believed scientific theories were came from

Inspiration, creativity, intuition derived from real life. 

200

The process of fixing/adjusting your theories to explain refutable evidence 

ad - hocing 

200

Deduction is 

the inference of particular instances by reference to a general law or principle.

300

Fallibilism is 

all our knowledge of the world is provisional and subject to correction in the future. 

300

Falsificationism

Popper's claim that scientists are only intersted in falsification.

300

What his main deal? How did this all come about?

He wanted to differentiate science from pseudo science.

300

What should scientists always be critical of?

Their own scientific theories!

300

What is tautology ?

a statement that is true by necessity or by virtue of its logical form.

400

Hypothetico deductivism

formulating a hypothesis in a form that can be falsifiable, using a test on observable data where the outcome is not yet known

400

True or False- Induction exists in falsificationism 

FALSE

400

Why didn't Popper like Marxism & Psychoanalysis?

Predictions were too general and vague. 

principels were SO general they could be compatible with any observaton 

400

What are degrees of falsification

Testability is falsifiability; but there are degrees of testability: Some theories are more testable, more exposed to refutation, than others;

400

The philosophical doctrine that only statements that are empirically verifiable are cognitively meaningful, or else they are truths of logic

Verification Principle 

500

What is corroboration 

bold conjecture that made novel predictions that were not falsified. 

500

Falsification is only possible in science IF

THERE IS INTERSUBJECTIVE AGREEMENT among scientists about what is being tested on any given occasion. 

500

Why did Popper have issues with verificationism?

Because its easy to find confirmations of any theory if we look for them. 

500

What is the difference between the context of discovery and the context of justification?

–Distinction between the inventing of scientific theories (context of discovery) and their testing (context of justification).

500

A non -refutable theory to Popper is

Nonscientific