So,falsifyingconfirming the claim A can be done by only considering non-black things that need not necessarily be ravens. That is we may look at a green apple or white clouds and be secure that the claim A [not only] hasn't been falsified [but has also been positively confirmed]. — TheMadFool
So long as we don't encounter a non-black raven, we can, according to Karl Popper, invest our trust in the, as yet unfalsified, claim A = all ravens are black. — TheMadFool
In other words, the Raven paradox is not a paradox in a scientific sense — TheMadFool
an inability to falsify a claim counts as support for whatever the claim is — TheMadFool
we may believe it, given that there's also positive evidence (black ravens) to back the claim. — TheMadFool
an inability to falsify a claim counts as support for whatever the claim is
— TheMadFool
You mean confirming evidence counts as support? But how to measure confirmation? — bongo fury
This would be letting confirmation back in through the same door that Popper just tossed it out. — Pantagruel
Sure it is. But it's a problem for induction: for deciding between equally as-yet-unfalsified hypotheses. — bongo fury
This would be letting confirmation back in through the same door that Popper just tossed it out. — Pantagruel
falsification theory (hypothetico-deduction — bongo fury
The statement, all cats are animals is falsifiable precisely by looking for and finding a non-animal that's not a cat. — TheMadFool
Well, it's his main thesis, to be scientific, an hypothesis must be falsifiable, so disconfirming evidence must be at least possible. Whereas induction fails to ever rise to the level of certainty, which he establishes in a variety of ways. I find the logical niceties tortuous at times (like this paradox - what could the status of a non-raven entity ever add to the knowledge of ravens?). However the overall thrust of scientific realism, that objectivity is not what we see, but what has been subjected to critical thought, that I very much like.I guess Popper considers the absence of negative evidence i.e. disconfirming observations as better than positive evidence (confirming evidence). — TheMadFool
I find the logical niceties tortuous at times (like this paradox - what could the status of a non-raven entity ever add to the knowledge of ravens?). — Pantagruel
Nope, it's falsifiable by finding a non-animal that is a cat.
"All cats are animals" = "if cat then animal" = "not (cat and non-animal)"
To falsify it, you have to find the negation of that, which would then be "cat and non-animal". — Pfhorrest
Well, it's his main thesis, to be scientific, an hypothesis must be falsifiable, so disconfirming evidence must be at least possible. Whereas induction fails to ever rise to the level of certainty, which he establishes in a variety of ways. I find the logical niceties tortuous at times (like this paradox - what could the status of a non-raven entity ever add to the knowledge of ravens?). However the overall thrust of scientific realism, that objectivity is not what we see, but what has been subjected to critical thought, that I very much like. — Pantagruel
↪bongo fury Thanks for noticing the error in my post. I made the necessary corrections.
Sure it is. But it's a problem for induction: for deciding between equally as-yet-unfalsified hypotheses.
— bongo fury
How is it a paradox when you agree that falsificationism requires those who make hypotheses to look for counter-evidence by searching outside the domain of the subjects of hypotheses? The statement, all cats are animals is falsifiable precisely by looking for and finding a non-animal that's not a cat. — TheMadFool
It's a paradox and potential embarrassment for confirmation theory because it appears to entitle those who make hypotheses to look for confirming evidence by searching outside the domain of the subjects of hypotheses. The statement, all cats are animals is apparently confirmable precisely by looking for and finding a non-animal that's not a cat.
I.e. the embarrassment isn't fatal. — bongo fury
Ergo, by Popper's account of what a scientific claim is, statement A is not disproved and given [that there are some ravens that are blackthat statement A is falsifiable], statement A acquires the status of a scientific theory - to be taken as [true for all intents & purposesa theory as yet unfalsified and worth testing]. — TheMadFool
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