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Popper on Scientific Statements
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2009
Extract
It is obvious that two contingent statements, each of which denies the existence of something, can be inconsistent with one another: for example, ‘There are no non-black ravens, and there is at least one raven’, and ‘There are no black ravens’. But it is also obvious that these two statements are inconsistent only because one of them, as well as denying the existence of something, asserts the existence of something. The mere denials of existence, ‘There are no non-black ravens’ and ‘There are no black ravens’, are consistent with one another. (Both of them would be true if there were no ravens at all.) Indeed, it must hold quite generally that two contingent statements cannot be inconsistent, where each is a mere denial of existence in the sense that it denies existence and does not also assert existence. For in order to be inconsistent with a mere denial of existence, a second statement must assert existence, whatever else it may do; and if it asserts existence, it is not itself a mere denial of existence.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1978
References
1 See the article of this name in The Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 1972.Google Scholar
2 Popper, implies, (on p. 102Google Scholar of The Logic of Scientific Discovery), that one basic statement can be inconsistent with another; and he asserts, (on p. 988 of The Philosophy of Karl Popper, ed. Schilpp, , Open Court, La Salle, Illinois, 1974)Google Scholar, that basic statements can be empirical under his criterion.
3 I wish to thank two graduate students, Roger Wilkins and Stephen Dumpleton, for their criticisms of a draft version of this paper.
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