Science and Pseudoscience Falsifiability
Science and Pseudoscience Falsifiability
Nicolae Sfetcu
Sfetcu, Nicolae, " Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability ", SetThings (January 27, 2019),
MultiMedia Publishing (ed.), DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.29821.61926, URL =
https://www.telework.ro/en/science-and-pseudoscience-falsifiability/
Email: [email protected]
Extract from:
Sfetcu, Nicolae, "The distinction between falsification and refutation in the demarcation problem
of Karl Popper", SetThings (2019), MultiMedia Publishing (ed.), DOI:
10.13140/RG.2.2.22522.54725, ISBN 978-606-033-207-7, URL = https://www.telework.ro/ro/e-
books/the-distinction-between-falsification-and-refutation-in-the-demarcation-problem-of-karl-
popper/
Nicolae Sfetcu: Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability
The delimitation between science and pseudoscience is part of the more general task of
can focus on descriptive content and specify how the term is used, or it can focus on the normative
element and clarify the more fundamental meaning of the term 1. The earliest use of this name is
considered to belong to the French physiologist François Magendie, (Magendie 1843) who is
considered one of the pioneers of experimental physiology. There is a divergence between the
philosophers of science and some members of the scientific community about the possibility of an
Professor Paul DeHart Hurd believes that a great deal of scientists can distinguish between
science and various pseudoscience (Hurd 1998) such as astrology, (Sfetcu 2015, 257)
charlatanism, occultism (Sfetcu 2015, 229) or superstition. Pseudoscience is any subject that
appears to be scientific at first glance, or whose supporters claim to be scientific, but which
contravenes test conditions or deviates from other fundamental aspects of scientific methods.
Standards for demarcation may vary by domain, but several basic principles are universally
accepted. All the experimental results should be reproducible, the scientific method can be applied
everywhere, the prejudices can be controlled or eliminated, the experiments are correct, the studies
can be objective, etc. Data to be documented for reproduction and for further studies. Statistical
quantification of importance, trust, and error are also important tools for the scientific method.
(Sfetcu 2015, 2)
1
Pseudoscience is a methodology, belief, or practice considered by its supporters to be scientific, or which
seems to be scientific, but does not adhere to an appropriate scientific methodology, lacking its supportive evidence
or plausible character, or confirmed scientific status.
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Nicolae Sfetcu: Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability
The conflict between science and pseudoscience is found, on the one hand, in the
community of disciplines of knowledge that includes natural and social sciences and humanities,
and on the other hand in a wide variety of movements and doctrines such as creationism (Sfetcu
2015, 112) astrology, homeopathy and holocaust denialism, in conflict with generally accepted
Not all non-sciences are pseudoscience, like metaphysics or religion. Mahner proposed the
term "para-science" for non-scientific practices that are not pseudoscience. (Mahner 2007)
"Un-scientific" is a narrower concept than "non-scientific" because the first term implies a
certain form of contradiction or conflict with science, and "pseudo-scientific" is more restricted
than "non-scientific" because it implies an intentionality. Many authors assume that in order to be
pseudoscientific, an activity or a teaching must satisfy two criteria: (Hansson 1996) (1) not being
scientific and (2) its main supporters attempt to create the impression that it is scientific.
However, there are phenomena that meet both criteria, but are not pseudoscientific, such
as fraud in science. Some forms of pseudoscience have as objective the struggle against a scientific
theory (scientific denialism), such as the denial of the Nazi Holocaust (Gleberzon 1984) or the
denial of climate change. (Williams 2005) Also, the theory of "intelligent design" (Sfetcu 2015,
Grove included among the pseudoscientific doctrines those who "intend to provide
alternative explanations to those in science, or to pretend to explain what science cannot explain."
(Grove 1985) In a wider sense, it is assumed that pseudoscience includes not only doctrines
contrary to science proclaimed to be scientific but also doctrines contrary to science in court,
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Nicolae Sfetcu: Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability
Falsifiability
science and pseudoscience. He argues that verification and confirmation can play no role in
distinguished from non-scientific theories by testable claims that future observations might reveal
to be false. Popper draws attention to the fact that scientific theories are characterized by the
Popper is a realist who argues that scientific theories follow the truth; he does not believe
that empirical evidence can ever give us reason to believe that a theory is true or can be true. In
this sense, Popper is a fallibilist, stating that it is impossible to justify the belief that a certain
scientific theory is true. Where others see the progress of science by confirming the truth of private
selecting against inappropriate theories by falsifying them. (Shea 2017) Thus, the term falsifiability
Popper pointed out that non-falsifiable claims are important in science. Contrary to
falsifiable theories. Popper invented the notion of metaphysical research programs to name such
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Nicolae Sfetcu: Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability
cannot be verified or falsified, Popper argued that falsifiability is only a special case of the more
general notion of criticality, even though he admitted that empirical rejection is one of the most
effective methods by which theories can be criticized. Criticality, unlike falsifiability and therefore
tollens, through an observation. The logic of naive falsifiability is valid but limited, due to possible
response to Pierre Duhem's criticism. W. V. Quine called this the argument of confirmation holism.
To falsify logically a universal, one can find a single true falsifiable statement, but it is always
possible to change the universal statement or the existential statement so that it does not falsify.
Thus, naive falsification does not allow scientists to present a definitive falsification of universal
statements.
Popper denied having imagined such naive theory of falsifiability. He contests that he has
ever developed a naive theory of falsifiability. From the very beginning he emphasized in his work
published in 1933, and especially in 1934, that you can avoid any refutation, but that it is very
important to try to build your theory in such a way that it can be denied. One may try - and he has
said it explicitly in The Logic of Scientific Discovery - to save the theory by means of assumptions
rejecting falsified theories by keeping those with more explanatory power, rather than by falsified
statements.
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Nicolae Sfetcu: Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability
The second form of falsifiability considered was the methodological one. The
falsificationist makes the same basic assumptions as in dogmatic falsification, but they are called
supports risky decisions. Although the choice we make might be wrong, the methodological
falsificationist sees this as a problem of the least two evils. Paul Newall states that it is hard to
criticize methodological falsification for the simple reason that it is unfalsifiable. (Newall 2005)
sophisticated version of falsifiability based on imposed conditions, that is, the new theory to have
excessive empirical content, to explain everything that was explained before, and some of these
new predictions to be confirmed by experiment. A theory must not be rejected as false until a better
one develops. This leads us to a notion of growth or development of theories instead of dogmatic
falsifiability that accepts or rejects them in single cases and no experiment can be crucial if it is
not interpreted as such after the event in the light of a new theory for which it offers corroboration.
Finally, the idea of proliferation of theories (pluralism) is important for sophisticated falsifiability,
unlike the dogmatic version. (Newall 2005) The conflict in science is not so between theories and
"Whilst I do not demand any final certainty from science (and consequently do not get it),
the conventionalist seeks in science ‘a system of knowledge based upon ultimate grounds’,
to use a phrase of Dingler." (K. R. Popper 2002)
Lakatos states that sophisticated falsification is different from the naive both in the rules of
acceptance (or the "demarcation criterion") and in its rules of falsification or rejection. There is no
falsification before the occurrence of a better theory. But then the negative distinctive character of
naive falsification disappears; criticism becomes more difficult and also positive, constructive.
(Lakatos 1970)
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Nicolae Sfetcu: Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability
In the case of two incompatible theories, we have to go back to the conventional aspects of
choice. Calling on new corroborated facts involves a clear delimitation between observational and
theoretical terms, with conventional decisions on what constitutes "basic" knowledge. For naive
falsifiability, science develops through the successive experimental rejection of theories; steady
proliferation of theories is optional but not mandatory. For sophisticated falsifiability, proliferation
of theories cannot wait until accepted theories are "rejected." While naive falsifiability emphasizes
the "urgency of replacing a falsified hypothesis with a better one," sophisticated falsifiability
underscores the urgency of replacing any of the best assumptions. (Lakatos 1970)
"The system of basic statements, as I use the term, is to include, rather, all self-consistent
singular statements of a certain logical form—all conceivable singular statements of fact,
as it were. Thus, the system of all basic statements will contain many statements which are
mutually incompatible. "
"A theory is to be called 'empirical' or 'falsifiable' if it divides the class of all possible basic
statements unambiguously into the following two nonempty subclasses. First, the class of
all those basic statements with which it is inconsistent (or which it rules out or prohibits):
we call this the class of the potential falsifiers of the theory; and secondly, the class of those
basic statements which it does not contradict (or which it 'permits'). We can put this more
briefly by saying: a theory is falsifiable if the class of its potential falsifiers is not empty."
(K. R. Popper 2002)
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Nicolae Sfetcu: Science and pseudoscience - Falsifiability
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