|QuestionSubject=When epistemic agent discover that a theory was accepted erroneously, they often reject the theory; the theory rejection theorem suggests that those propositions are replaced by something. What are they replaced by?Error
|Topic Type=Descriptive
|Subfield=Dynamics|Inherited From=|Heritable=No|Question Text Formula=|Question Title Formula=|Question=When epistemic agent discover that a theory was accepted [[Error|erroneously]], they often reject the theory; the theory rejection theorem suggests that those propositions are replaced by something. What are they replaced by?|Question Title=|Predicate=|Object Type=|Object Value True=|Object Value False=|Object Class=|Object Enum Values=|Object Regexp=|Single Answer Text Formula=|Multiple Answers Text Formula=|Answer Title Formula=|Description=[[Error|Errors ]] are ubiquitous in scientific practice: scientists often come to realize that the acceptance of a certain theory was erroneous. This applies to both general theories and singular propositions describing the results of experiments and observations. The theory rejection theorem suggests that when these erroneously accepted theories become rejected they are still replaced by some other theory or theories. The question is: what are these erroneously accepted theories replaced by? For example, astronomical databases trivially reject inaccurate data points from their databases. Are these data points replaced by anything? More generally, how are instances of scientific error handled in science?|Parent Topic=Mechanism of Theory Rejection|Authors List=Maxim Mirkin, Sinan Karamehmetoglu,