Well at least now I know you disagree with me.My argument is, Evolution is falsifiable. Is a scientific theory.
They seem fine, but only marginally relevant. The macro (group psychology) processes have been largely rejected and replaced by the philosophy of Kuhn. This in particular is not the way science works:Do you agree with the following defintions:
It was implicit in both models presented.At some point, the weight of the ad hoc hypotheses and disregarded falsifying observations will become so great that it becomes unreasonable to support the base theory any longer, and a decision will be made to reject it.
As Kuhn put it, the new theory does not become universally accepted by the scientific community as a replacement for the old incorrect one until the last of the crusty old holdouts dies. This of course happens at a very different level (macro vs micro) to the issue of what makes a theory scientific. It is an emergent group psychology behaviour.
Just like my unicorn theory. I keep bringing this up to point out that the criteria you appear to be applying for what makes a theory scientific are untenable. Of course, you are hardly clear on what those criteria are - hence the unicorn example, rather than a more direct criticism of your criteria.I can be falsified, it has not been todate.
Perhaps I should rephrase it. It is explained in a glorious intellectual victory that avoids the need for the modern scientific method of enquiry.The argument that because we cannot understand everything in the past, do not have the detailed data for something does not mean it is "just explained away".
What is your point?
Because that is where the boundary of the scientific method is. This is why I brought up the titanium unicorn horn as an example of why the inclusion of a scientific aspect does not make the whole scientific.Natural Selection is a key part fo Evolution... why do you keep separating the two
If you throw out the requirement for repeatable experiments in falsifiability, my unicorn theory is also scientific.That's not entirely true. Popper claimed that, if a theory is falsifiable, then it is scientific.
This theory - universal common ancestry - is also unfalsifiable. It is also circular in the sense that you end up defining life by the common ancestry.True. I meant the first form of life once it was created. To be more specific. after the soup created the first life.... all life evolved from that.
Yes SN that is what I said. It did not disprove the theory. It demonstrated the infinite adaptability of the theory.So you agree the theory stands just that they had to adjust the details of the tree of life that had built when more detail come to light. These ajustment don't disprove the theory, just the details of the what happened here on earth.