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|Description=Given the '''nonempty mosaic''' theorem, it follows that there must be at least one element present in a mosaic. By the Second Law a theory can only be accepted into a mosaic if there is a method the community can use to appraise the theory. By the Third Law, methods become employed when they are deductive consequences of accepted theories. Thus, there must exist some proposition in the form of a primitive dynamic substantive method in the nonempty mosaic with which a community can appraise new theories.
{{PrintDiagramFile|diagramfilediagram file=Necessary-method-theorem.jpg}}
|Resource=Barseghyan (2015)
}}