This paper presents a new ‘discontinuous’ view of Popper’s theory of corroboration, where theories cease to have corroboration values when new severe tests are devised which have not yet been performed, on the basis of a passage from The Logic of Scientific Discovery. Through subsequent analysis and discussion, a novel problem for Popper’s account of corroboration, which holds also for the standard (‘continuous’) view, emerges. This is the problem of the Big Test: that the severest test of any hypothesis is actually to perform all possible tests (when ‘possible’ is suitably interpreted). But this means that Popper’s demand for ‘the severest tests’ amounts simply to a demand for ‘all possible tests’. The paper closes by considering how this ...
Le falsificationnisme de Popper se caractérise autant par le fait qu’il admet pleinement la faillibi...
Our research explored the incidence and appropriateness of the much-maligned confirmatory approach t...
According to Karl Popper, science cannot verify its theories empirically, but it can falsify them, a...
According to influential accounts of scientific method, e.g., critical rationalism, scientific knowl...
How are we to understand the use of probability in Popper’s corroboration function? Popper says logi...
This article shows that Popper\u27s measure of corroboration is inapplicable if, as Popper argued, t...
According to influential accounts of scientific method, e.g., critical rationalism, scientific knowl...
How are we to understand the use of probability in corroboration functions? Popper says logically, b...
A scientific theory, according to Popper, can be legitimately saved from falsification by introducin...
<div><p>Our research explored the incidence and appropriateness of the much-maligned confirmatory ap...
The empirical testing of theories is an important component of research in any field. Yet despite th...
The replication crisis poses an enormous challenge to the epistemic authority of science and the log...
Popper's supporters argued that most criticism is based on an incomprehensible interpretation of his...
According to Karl Popper, science cannot verify its theories empirically, but it can falsify them, a...
We ordinarily assume that we have reliable knowledge of our immediate surroundings, so much so that ...
Le falsificationnisme de Popper se caractérise autant par le fait qu’il admet pleinement la faillibi...
Our research explored the incidence and appropriateness of the much-maligned confirmatory approach t...
According to Karl Popper, science cannot verify its theories empirically, but it can falsify them, a...
According to influential accounts of scientific method, e.g., critical rationalism, scientific knowl...
How are we to understand the use of probability in Popper’s corroboration function? Popper says logi...
This article shows that Popper\u27s measure of corroboration is inapplicable if, as Popper argued, t...
According to influential accounts of scientific method, e.g., critical rationalism, scientific knowl...
How are we to understand the use of probability in corroboration functions? Popper says logically, b...
A scientific theory, according to Popper, can be legitimately saved from falsification by introducin...
<div><p>Our research explored the incidence and appropriateness of the much-maligned confirmatory ap...
The empirical testing of theories is an important component of research in any field. Yet despite th...
The replication crisis poses an enormous challenge to the epistemic authority of science and the log...
Popper's supporters argued that most criticism is based on an incomprehensible interpretation of his...
According to Karl Popper, science cannot verify its theories empirically, but it can falsify them, a...
We ordinarily assume that we have reliable knowledge of our immediate surroundings, so much so that ...
Le falsificationnisme de Popper se caractérise autant par le fait qu’il admet pleinement la faillibi...
Our research explored the incidence and appropriateness of the much-maligned confirmatory approach t...
According to Karl Popper, science cannot verify its theories empirically, but it can falsify them, a...