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|Question=Are there really instances of necessary theory acceptance or does every case of theory acceptance involve some degree of inconclusiveness?
|Topic Type=Descriptive
|Description=[[The Second Law (Barseghyan-2015)|The second law]] specifies that, in order to become accepted, a theory is assessed by the method employed at the time .[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|pp. 129-132]]. Barseghyan [[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|p. 199]] envisioned three possible distinct outcomes for theory assessment: accept, not accept, and inconclusive. [[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|p. 199]] Are there really cases where acceptance of a theory is necessary, or is there always some degree of inconclusiveness? If there are necessary cases, is it possible for us as historians to show decisively that a theory was necessarily accepted rather than accepted after an assessment that involved some degree of inconclusiveness. We can ask the same question with regard to mosaic splits: are [[Necessary Mosaic Split theorem (Barseghyan-2015)|necessary splits]] theoretically possible, or are all mosaic splits the result of inconclusive assessment? And if they are possible, can we ever as historians detect them?
|Parent Topic=Mechanism of Theory Acceptance
|Authors List=Paul Patton,
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