Logical positivism was one of the things Popper was responding to. The Vienna Circle were mainly active between the wars, and A J. Ayer published Language, Truth and Logic in 1936. And positivism in the broad sense of ‘a philosophical system recognizing only that which can be scientifically verified or which is capable of logical or mathematical proof, and therefore rejecting metaphysics and theism’ is still highly influential even if only tacit much of the time. — Wayfarer
As I said, a lot of positivism is tacit - it’s not defended as a formal philosophy but is implicit.
It’s worth recalling who invented the term ‘positivism’ and why - it was Auguste Comte, who founded sociology. Positivism was a form of historicism, i.e. culture evolved through progressive stages, beginning with animism, then monotheism, metaphysics, and then culminating in the emergence into the sunlit uplands of science. And though they don’t use the terminology, it is clearly visible in nearly all the writings of the scientific atheism of Dawkins, Dennett, Pinker, and others of that ilk. In that sense, positivism remains one of the predominant influences on scientific-secular thinking. — Wayfarer
Are you asking how they could have missed the Popperian insight that scientific theories are never verified, but are merely falsified, or something else? — Janus
Of course this insight may be found already implicit in Hume and explicit in Peirce. I'm not familiar with the 'Principle of Bivalence' so I can't see how it might relate to the notion of falsification. — Janus
I can think of a couple of ways that something that is one way could be otherwise; one to do with actuality and the other to do with logical possibility. In terms of actuality something could change and become something it previously was not. In terms of possibility, something could have been other than it is.
I am not seeing how either of these relate to falsifiability, at least as Popper, according to my understanding, conceived it.. — Janus
Not to quibble, but I'm not sure it's correct to say that no conceivable result could falsify (or verify) string theory: it's just that the energy levels needed to test the theory may well be forever out of reach of practical implementation. So, string theory may be unfalsifiable in practice, though not in principle.In respect of current speculative physics, the critics of string theory are saying that no conceivable result could falsify the theory, as the ‘strings’ themselves are forever out of scope for empirical investigation, and if there are other universes, then so too are they. — Wayfarer
This year (2014), 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.
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