[Home]Falsifiability

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Falsifiability is an essential concept in the [philosophy of science]?. For an assertion to be falsifiable, there must exist some theoretical physical experiment or observation that would convince the observer that the assertion is false. For example, the assertion "All crows are black" could be falsified by observing a red crow.

Karl Popper stressed that falsifiability is critical to the scientific method. If an explanation can be falsified, then it is scientific and should be tested. If it can't (that is, it is unfalsifiable), then it is entirely outside the realm of science and totally irrelevant to it.

Some examples of things that are unfalsifiable are:

Examples of falsifiable theories:

Any theory based upon a non-falsifiable premise is itself non-falsifiable. For example, a physical theory that posits multiple parallel universes with which we cannot interact is necessarily non-flasifiable. If the premise is changed to allow some theoretical mechanism by which we can see or change something in those universes, then it might theoretically become testable.

It should be noted that while the criterion of falsifiability is a foundation of modern science, many scientists and educators are lax in its application to their beliefs in general. For example, many scientists hold and express strong opinions about the existence of God or the non-existence of God, even though such beliefs are not falsifiable and thus not scientific. Likewise, scientists may often speculate or extend analogies to offer explanations for things that are not yet easily testable, and thus not falsifiable. For example, some theories like evolutionary psychology are offered as explanations for human behavior even though we presently lack the technology to rigorously test what causes human behavior. These theories are only falsifiable and "scientific" to the degree that they predict some future means of being able to test them, or that individual facts predicted by the theory might be testable on their own.

There are also degrees of falsifiability, and scientific hypotheses are considered superior if they are more falsifiable than competing ones. For example, a hypothesis for which there are many presently available tests (such as most physical laws) is superior to one that may only be testable in the future with some new technology (such as some psychological theories), and those are in turn superior to hypotheses that can never be tested because they are fundamentally untestable by their very nature (such as the existence or non-existence of God).


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Edited December 5, 2001 6:37 am by BenBaker (diff)
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