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Revision as of 15:00, 6 July 2016
The modification was first suggested by Zoe Sebastien in 2015 in her paper titled "The Status of Normative Propositions in the Theory of Scientific Change". The paper was officially published in the Journal of Scientonomy in 2016.1
Preamble
Currently, a theory is defined as a set of propositions that attempts to describe something. This definition excludes normative propositions from the scope of the TSC. Normative theories, such as those of methodology or ethics, have been excluded since including them appears to give rise to a destructive paradox first identified by Joel Burkholder. There are many historical cases where employed scientific methods are known to conflict with professed methodologies. This seems to violate the third and zeroth laws of scientific change. By the third law, employed methods are deducible from accepted theories. But, this seems impossible in cases where methodologies and methods conflict. Under the zeroth law, all elements in the scientific are compatible with one another. But, that seems to be clearly not the case if methodologies and methods conflict with one another.
Modification
Reformulate the third law in order to make it clear that employed methods do not have to be deducible from all accepted theories and employed methods but only from some:
Verdict
The modification was accepted in 2016 by general consensus.
References
- ^ Sebastien, Zoe. (2016) The Status of Normative Propositions in the Theory of Scientific Change. Scientonomy 1, 1-9. Retrieved from https://www.scientojournal.com/index.php/scientonomy/article/view/26947.