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|Prehistory=This idea is not new to philosophers of science. For example, it is expressed in [[Kuhn (1970a)]]: "scientists behave in the following ways; those modes of behaviour have… the following essential functions; in the absence of an alternative mode that would serve similar functions, scientists should behave essentially as they do if their concern is to improve scientific knowledge."[[CiteRef::Kuhn (1970a)|p. 237]] This is similar to our formulation of [[The First Law for Methods (Barseghyan-2015)]], disregarding the normative piece ("scientists should behave").
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{{Theory Example
|Accepted From Approximate=No
|Acceptance Indicators=The law 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=YesNo|Accepted Until Era=CE|Accepted Until Year=2024|Accepted Until Month=February|Accepted Until Day=22
|Accepted Until Approximate=No
|Rejection Indicators=The law was rejected as a result of the acceptance of modification [[Modification:Sciento-2023-0002|Sciento-2023-0002]]. It was replaced by [[The First Law for Norms (Barseghyan-Pandey-2023)]].
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