Difference between revisions of "Theory Acceptance without Sufficient Reason"
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− | |Description= | + | |Description=By the [[Sufficient Reason theorem]], theories become accepted when they have a sufficient reason to be accepted. The question remains as to how theories become accepted, if at all, without a sufficient reason. Two common cases where theories seem to be accepted without a sufficient reason are in self-evident theories and in circular reasoning.[[CiteRef::Palider (2019)|p. 28]] In self-evident theories, the theories seem to be accepted without another theory as a reason. In cases of circular reasoning, two or more theories seem to be reasons for one another, without an independent reason for accepting either one of them. These cases merit further exploration as they are not immediately explainable by the scientonomic theory. |
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+ | |Authors List=Kye Palider | ||
|Formulated Year=2019 | |Formulated Year=2019 | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:30, 11 June 2020
How do theories become accepted without a sufficient reason, i.e. in the cases of circularity or theories without a reason?
By the Sufficient Reason theorem, theories become accepted when they have a sufficient reason to be accepted. The question remains as to how theories become accepted, if at all, without a sufficient reason. Two common cases where theories seem to be accepted without a sufficient reason are in self-evident theories and in circular reasoning.1 In self-evident theories, the theories seem to be accepted without another theory as a reason. In cases of circular reasoning, two or more theories seem to be reasons for one another, without an independent reason for accepting either one of them. These cases merit further exploration as they are not immediately explainable by the scientonomic theory.
In the scientonomic context, this question was first formulated by Kye Palider in 2019.
Contents
Scientonomic History
Acceptance Record
All Theories
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Accepted Theories
Suggested Modifications
Current View
There is currently no accepted answer to this question.
Related Topics
References
- ^ Palider, Kye. (2019) Reasons in the Scientonomic Ontology. Scientonomy 3, 15-31. Retrieved from https://scientojournal.com/index.php/scientonomy/article/view/33557.