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{{Theory
|Title=Scope of Scientonomy- Both Implicit and Explicit
|Theory Type=Normative
|Formulation Text=A scientonomic theory ought to distinguish between explicit statements of methodology, and actual employed methods, which may sometimes be implicit. It ought to account for employed methods, whether they correspond with an explicit stated methodology, or are purely implicit.
|Topic=Scope of Scientonomy - Explicit and Implicit
|Authors List=Hakob Barseghyan,
|Formulated Year=2017
|Description=The [[Method|methods]] employed in [[Theory Assessment Outcomes|theory assessment]] do not always correspond to the professed scientific [[Methodology|methodology]], and may be purely implicit. Thus, a scientonomic theory ought to distinguish between accepted methodologies and employed methods. Because of their role in theory assessment, and thus in determining the contents of the [[Scientific Mosaic|scientific mosaic]], they must nonetheless be a part of any [[Scientonomy|scientonomic theory]]ought to include employed methods, whether they are explicit or implicit or explicit. [[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015) |pp. 52-61]]
|Resource=Barseghyan (2015)
|Page Status=StubNeeds Editing
}}
{{Acceptance Record
|Accepted From Day=1
|Accepted From Approximate=No
|Acceptance Indicators=The theory was introduced by Barseghyan in ''The Laws of Scientific Change'' [[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)| pp. 52-61]] and became ''de facto'' accepted by the community at that time together with the whole [[The Theory of Scientific Change|theory of scientific change]].
|Still Accepted=Yes
|Accepted Until Approximate=No
}}