When people that rely on it don't die out.
Wouldn't "law" be a better word then 'fact'? For this discourse?
Nope! Both are entirely falsifiable. Evolution is falsifiable by the discovery of a species which has been extinct for millions of years, for example. Atomic theory is falsifiable by the discovery of phenomena which would not coincede with an atomic picture of nature. It just so happens that all the evidence has not sofar falsified either theory.However, many theories like evolution and the atomic theory effectively cannot be disproven.
No,it is more like saying-Facts that is tested or widely accepted are grouped up together to make a particular theory that can make predictions about a phenomena.Facts become theories.
(Or rather, facts are explained by theories.)
How on earth does this work?Evolution is falsifiable by the discovery of a species which has been extinct for millions of years, for example.
How on earth does this work?
At best it disproves the presumed extinction of this species (since it's obviously alive it never went extinct), which might do the trick if it was "the theory of extinction" and not the theory of evolution. There are plenty of these "living fossils" in the form of very ancient kinds of organisms that never went extinct. It in no way falsifies evolution.
Yeah, that was a stupid example. It's seems circular, but it must be falsifiable because it's a scientific theory. I was trying to clarify that, (that it cannot be "pretty much unproven") but I just gave a poor example.
Whenever a handful of influential people start calling it a fact.
Which theories are now called facts?Technically, a theory never becomes a fact. In practice, a theory gets called a fact once it's been strengthened and modified without being disproven on any major point for about 100 years.
Though theories do not become laws either. Again, they are different things - a law is an expression of some observed behaviour (e.g., a formula).Wouldn't "law" be a better word then 'fact'? For this discourse?
Sure, but there is this model of the process of research which has been labelled "black-boxing".A theory never really does become a fact. There's always the possibility that the "proof" has a flaw in it.
Exactly. Just like the fact Pluto was a planet but now isn't. The rock called Pluto didn't change one bit during this time.
Not the "flat earth myth" again. It was badly exaggerated.Exactly. Just like the fact Earth was flat but now it isn't. The rock called Earth didn't change one bit during this time.
Exactly. Just like the fact Pluto was a planet but now isn't. The rock called Pluto didn't change one bit during this time.
Not the "flat earth myth" again. It was badly exaggerated.
The flat earth myth was created to make those who lived in the medieval period look more stupid than they really were. It appeals to man's ego to think they are a lot smarter than their ancestors/parents."First of all, it is interesting to note that nearly all scholars of the medieval period, contemporary and past, have concluded that the medievals believed the world to be round."
I agree"This is the modern belief about earlier generations that tells us more about ourselves than about the people in the past"