Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
If it is to form part of science, an hypothesis must be falsifiable.
In the second sense it is factually true and falsifiable.
An hypothesis should be more falsifiable than the one for which it is offered as a replacement.
The modified hypothesis is less falsifiable than the original version.
He says that neither evolution nor intelligent design is falsifiable.
A good scientific law or theory is falsifiable just because it makes definite claims about the world.
Falsifiable hypotheses are proposed by scientists as solutions to the problem.
Since the time of Galileo, physics has been an experimentally falsifiable science.
For it is very difficult to specify just how falsifiable a single theory is.
Knowledge only progresses, he argued, when falsifiable claims about the world get proven wrong.
Skeptical researchers point out that unlike other psychic claims this case is falsifiable.
"The problem is that the oceanic model isn't very falsifiable," Simon said quietly.
I propose a falsifiable hypothesis based on data obtained from experiment and/or observation.
Even so, the statement all swans are white is testable by being falsifiable.
Sychronicity itself is considered to be neither testable nor falsifiable.
Unfortunately, this seems more like an ideological presumption than a falsifiable scientific proposition.
The sharp distinction between falsifiable economic models and those that are not is by no means a universally accepted one.
Nevertheless, they are falsifiable in the sense intended.
The more precisely a theory is formulated the more falsifiable it becomes.
What was his methodology and are his findings falsifiable?
If it is a scientific theory, how is it falsifiable?
"The statement made in the first four lines of 'Doctor Atomic' is falsifiable," he said.
The causal assumptions embedded in the model often have falsifiable implications which can be tested against the data.
Some things simply do not lend themselves to being shown to be false, and therefore, are not falsifiable.
For something to be called a theory, it has to be falsifiable, capable of being overthrown.