irréfutable - significado y definición. Qué es irréfutable
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Qué (quién) es irréfutable - definición

PROPERTY OF A THEORY/HYPOTHESIS/STATEMENT THAT CAN BE LOGICALLY CONTRADICTED BY AN EMPIRICAL TEST OR A FACT
Falsifiable; Falsify; Unfalsifiable; Logic of falsification; Unfalsifiability; Un-testable hypothesis; Untestable hypothesis; Non-falsifiable; Falsifiablity; Falsifability; Falsifying; Falsified; Refutability; Falsifiably; Refutable; Refutably; Falsifiabilities; Refutabilities; Falsification (Falsifiability); Principle of falsification; Nonfalsifiable; Nonfalsifiability; Falsifiability principle; Untestability; Denied falsifiability; Dogmatic falsificationism; Naive falsificationism; Sophisticated falsificationism; Irrefutable; Popper's criterion
  • Here are two [[black swan]]s, but even with no black swans to possibly falsify it, "All swans are white" would still be shown falsifiable by "Here is a black swan"—a black swan would still be a state of affairs, only an imaginary one.<ref name=Popperonstateofaffairs group="upper-alpha"/>
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The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership         
BOOK BY JOHN C. MAXWELL
21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership: Follow Them and People Will Follow You is a 1998 book written by John C. Maxwell and published by Thomas Nelson.
irrefutable         
a.
Indisputable, unanswerable. See irrefragable.
irrefutable         
[?'r?fj?t?b(?)l, ??r?'fju:-]
¦ adjective impossible to deny or disprove.
Derivatives
irrefutability noun
irrefutably adverb

Wikipedia

Falsifiability

Falsifiability is a deductive standard of evaluation of scientific theories and hypotheses, introduced by the philosopher of science Karl Popper in his book The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1934). A theory or hypothesis is falsifiable (or refutable) if it can be logically contradicted by an empirical test.

Popper proposed falsifiability as the cornerstone solution to both the problem of induction and the problem of demarcation. He insisted that, as a logical criterion, falsifiability is distinct from the related concept "capacity to be proven wrong" discussed in Lakatos' falsificationism. Even being a logical criterion, its purpose is to make the theory predictive and testable, and thus useful in practice.

Popper contrasted falsifiability to the intuitively similar concept of verifiability that was then current in logical positivism. His argument goes that the only way to verify a claim such as "All swans are white" would be if one could theoretically observe all swans, which is not possible. Instead, falsifiability searches for the anomalous instance, such that observing a single black swan is theoretically reasonable and sufficient to logically falsify the claim. On the other hand, the Duhem–Quine thesis says that definitive experimental falsifications are impossible and that no scientific hypothesis is by itself capable of making predictions, because an empirical test of the hypothesis requires one or more background assumptions.

According to Popper there is a clean asymmetry on the logical side and falsifiability does not have the Duhem problem because it is a logical criterion. Experimental research has the Duhem problem and other problems, such as induction, but, according to Popper, statistical tests, which are only possible when a theory is falsifiable, can still be useful within a critical discussion. Philosophers such as Deborah Mayo consider that Popper "comes up short" in his description of the scientific role of statistical and data models.

As a key notion in the separation of science from non-science and pseudoscience, falsifiability has featured prominently in many scientific controversies and applications, even being used as legal precedent.