A Conversation for The Scientific Method
The Logic of Scientific Discovery
Joe Otten Started conversation Jun 16, 2003
In "The Logic of Scientific Discovery" (1935) Karl Popper deals with the case against the scientific method stated in the article without resorting to inductivism.
This book is rightly regarded as the definitive work on scientific method, and is worth a mention here.
The Logic of Scientific Discovery
NAITA (Join ViTAL - A1014625) Posted Jun 16, 2003
Then I suggest you mention it, since I have no idea what you just said.
To clarify. This thread is considered part of the entry, so now it does contain such a mention. Not a very useful mention though, since it raises more questions than it answers.
Making changes to the body of an Edited Entry is a lengthy process and doesn't happen fast or continously, but occurs when an entry _really_ needs a 'major' change. Or something.
The Logic of Scientific Discovery
Joe Otten Posted Jun 16, 2003
OK - so read the book.
Or...
http://www.rep.routledge.com/article/DD052SECT2
http://www.eeng.dcu.ie/~tkpw/intro_reading/Introductory_Reading.html#The%20Logic%20of%20Scientific%20Discovery
And from an opponent...
http://www.freethought-web.org/ctrl/gardner_popper.html
(The choice of ad hominem attack speaks for itself.)
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