A claim that renders counter-examples verifiable.
no true statement is falsifiable. — creativesoul
True statements are unable to be shown as false for they never are.
Better? — creativesoul
Do you have an example that demonstrates your proposed scenario/situation? — creativesoul
Any pair of particles produced by sub-atomic decay are entangled? — bongo fury
It would take observation of particles produced by sub atomic decay that did not subsequently 'exhibit' identical properties to falsify the statement — creativesoul
It would take observation of particles produced by sub atomic decay that did not subsequently 'exhibit' identical properties to falsify the statement
— creativesoul
Yes, but not to qualify it as falsifiable — bongo fury
My interpretation of what you are saying is that since true hypotheses cannot be falsified, since the evidence will end up supporting them, then they don't pass Popper's criterion. But this is confusing some kind of final knowledge with what we experience.Either all pairs of particles produced by sub-atomic decay are entangled or they are not. If they are not then the statement is false. It would take observation of particles produced by sub atomic decay that did not subsequently 'exhibit' identical properties to falsify the statement, but that situation cannot even occur if the statement is true. — creativesoul
My interpretation of what you are saying is that since true hypotheses cannot be falsified, since the evidence will end up supporting them, then they don't pass Popper's criterion — Coben
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