262
IN SO FAR AS
A SCIENTIFIC
STATEMENT SPEAKS
ABOUT REALITY,
IT MUST BE
FALSIFIABLE
KARL POPPER (1902–1994)
IN CONTEXT
BRANCH
Philosophy of science
APPROACH
Analytic philosophy
BEFORE
4th century BCE Aristotle
stresses the importance of
observation and measurement
to understanding the world.
1620 Francis Bacon sets
out the inductive methods of
science in Novum Organum.
1748 David Hume’s
Enquiry concerning Human
Understanding raises the
problem of induction.
AFTER
1962 Thomas Kuhn criticizes
Popper in The Structure of
Scientific Revolutions.
1978 Paul Feyerabend, in
Against Method, questions the
very idea of scientific method.
W
e often think that science
works by “proving”
truths about the world.
We might imagine that a good
scientific theory is one that we
can prove conclusively to be true.
The philosopher Karl Popper,
however, insists that this is not the
case. Instead, he says that what
makes a theory scientific is that it
is capable of being falsified, or being
shown to be wrong by experience.
Popper is interested in the
method by which science finds out
about the world. Science depends
on experiment and experience, and
if we want to do science well, we
need to pay close attention to what
philosopher David Hume called