Difference between revisions of "Scientific Mosaic (Barseghyan-2015)"
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|Formulation Text=A set of all accepted ''theories'' and employed ''methods''. | |Formulation Text=A set of all accepted ''theories'' and employed ''methods''. | ||
|Formulation File=Scientific Mosaic Theory Method Class Diagram.png | |Formulation File=Scientific Mosaic Theory Method Class Diagram.png | ||
− | |Description=According to this definition, scientific mosaic encompasses all [[Theory Acceptance|accepted]] theories and [[Employed Method|employed]] methods.[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|p. 5]] The definition assumes | + | |Description=According to this definition, scientific mosaic encompasses all [[Theory Acceptance|accepted]] theories and [[Employed Method|employed]] methods.[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|p. 5]] The definition assumes that theories and methods are the only two fundamental entities that undergo scientific change.[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|pp. 5-7]] |
While it is not included in the definition, it is understood that the bearer of a mosaic is a [[Scientific Community|scientific community]].[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|p. xi]] | While it is not included in the definition, it is understood that the bearer of a mosaic is a [[Scientific Community|scientific community]].[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|p. xi]] |
Revision as of 20:15, 3 February 2023
This is a definition of Scientific Mosaic that states "A set of all accepted theories and employed methods."
This definition of Scientific Mosaic was formulated by Hakob Barseghyan in 2015.1
Contents
Scientonomic History
Acceptance Record
Community | Accepted From | Acceptance Indicators | Still Accepted | Accepted Until | Rejection Indicators |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scientonomy | 1 January 2016 | The definition became de facto accepted by the community at that time together with the whole theory of scientific change. | No | 17 May 2020 | The definition became reject when it was replaced by Scientific Mosaic (Barseghyan-2018). |
Suggestions To Reject
These are all the modifications where the rejection of this definition has been suggested:
Modification | Community | Date Suggested | Summary | Verdict | Verdict Rationale | Date Assessed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sciento-2018-0009 | Scientonomy | 8 October 2018 | Accept the new definition of scientific mosaic as a set of all epistemic elements accepted and/or employed by the epistemic agent. | Accepted | Initially, the modification raised an objection from Patton who argued that the modification "is not acceptable at present, because it contains a term; epistemic agent, which has not yet been defined within scientonomy".c1 This objection received two counterarguments. According to Barseghyan, the lack of such a definition of epistemic agent should not "be taken as a reason for postponing the acceptance of the definition of scientific mosaic", since inevitably any taxonomy contains terms that "rely in their definitions on other (yet) undefined terms".c2 This point was seconded by Rawleigh who argued that the definition of scientific mosaic is to be accepted regardless of whether there is an accepted definition of epistemic agent, since "it's de facto accepted already that some agent is required to have a mosaic".c3 In early 2020, Patton dropped his objection as he found that there was "sufficient general understanding of what an epistemic agent is to accept this definition of the scientific mosaic, even without first accepting a definition of epistemic agent".c4 Additionally, Rawleigh argued that the definition is to be accepted since we have "already accepted the revised question-theory ontology".c5 | 17 May 2020 |
Question Answered
Scientific Mosaic (Barseghyan-2015) is an attempt to answer the following question: What is scientific mosaic? How should it be defined?
See Scientific Mosaic for more details.
Description
According to this definition, scientific mosaic encompasses all accepted theories and employed methods.1 The definition assumes that theories and methods are the only two fundamental entities that undergo scientific change.1
While it is not included in the definition, it is understood that the bearer of a mosaic is a scientific community.1
Reasons
No reasons are indicated for this definition.
If a reason supporting this definition is missing, please add it here.
Questions About This Definition
There are no higher-order questions concerning this definition.
If a question about this definition is missing, please add it here.