Should theories that no conceivable experiment can confirm be rejected outright?


Yes

1 to 10 of 19

Theories that no conceivable experiment can confirm should be rejected outright.

Unless the only problem with experimentation is that equipment is not sophisticated enough.

 Stand Taken 11/25/2008 8:58 PM

Theories that no conceivable experiment can confirm should be rejected outright.

But then how would Al Gore and government scientists make a living?

 Stand Taken 11/11/2008 4:05 PM

Theories that no conceivable experiment can confirm should be rejected outright.

A perfect example is this "global warming" theory. It has cost the world trillions, yet there is no evidence that it is even happening. But a basic law of science is that if a theory cannot be tested,...

 Stand Taken 11/10/2008 5:14 PM

Theories that no conceivable experiment can confirm should be rejected outright.

hypothetical just doesn't cut it

 Stand Taken 10/30/2008 12:07 AM

Theories that no conceivable experiment can confirm should be rejected outright.

Yes, because a proposition that can't be tested is not a theory.

 Stand Taken 5/9/2008 11:44 AM

whereIstand member

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