Difference between revisions of "Necessary Mosaic Split theorem (Barseghyan-2015) Reason1"

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|Authors List=Hakob Barseghyan
 
|Authors List=Hakob Barseghyan
 
|Formulated Year=2015
 
|Formulated Year=2015
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|Description=The necessary mosaic split theorem follows as a deductive consequence of the [[The Second Law|second law]] and the zeroth law. Per the zeroth law, two incompatible elements cannot simultaneously remain in a mosaic, and per the second law any theory that satisfies the method of the time (and the assessment of the theory by the method is not inconclusive) is accepted into the mosaic. This creates the apparently contradictory situation where either of the two theories A) must be accepted because it satisfies the employed method and B) must not be accepted because it in not compatible with another accepted theory.
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|Resource=Barseghyan (2015)
 
|Page Status=Stub
 
|Page Status=Stub
 
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|Editor Notes=
 
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Revision as of 20:03, 6 November 2023

The necessary mosaic split theorem follows as a deductive consequence of the second law and the zeroth law. Per the zeroth law, two incompatible elements cannot simultaneously remain in a mosaic, and per the second law any theory that satisfies the method of the time (and the assessment of the theory by the method is not inconclusive) is accepted into the mosaic. This creates the apparently contradictory situation where either of the two theories A) must be accepted because it satisfies the employed method and B) must not be accepted because it in not compatible with another accepted theory.This reason for Necessary Mosaic Split theorem (Barseghyan-2015) was formulated by Hakob Barseghyan in 2015.1

References

  1. ^  Barseghyan, Hakob. (2015) The Laws of Scientific Change. Springer.