Eduk wrote:Regarding requiring falsifiability before considering something a scientific theory. That seems reasonable to me? I can't think of anything which I know which doesn't fit into this requirement?Hm.. Karl Popper came up with a few examples, including Darwinian evolution. His ideas are (inevitably) more involved than the brief mention that was made here. To that I'd add, Behaviourism, String Theory, the Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics. If you're ever heard the theory that people don't really have free will and that all conscious thought is illusion, I'd suggest that was unfalsifiable as well.
As I understand it, Popper sugested that science was dependent on theories and expositions to move forward, and that only testable theories produced knowledge. However, there was no requirement for theories and expositions to be knowledge, indeed if they were knowledge, they wouldn't be theories, and thus it was not the case that only emperically tested ideas were valid for consideration. I'm a fan of Popper, but havn't studied him in any detail.