Popper, Basic Statements and the Quine-Duhem Thesis

Yearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society 9 (2007)
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Abstract

In this paper I explore Karl Popper’s ‘critical rationalism’, focusing on its presuppositions and implications as a form of realism regarding the nature of scientific truth. I reveal an underlying tension in Popper’s thought pertaining to his account of basic statements and the related question of whether the falsification of a universal theory can ever justifiably be regarded as final or conclusive. I conclude that Popper’s account of basic statements is implicitly conventionalist, and that it should, in consistency, have forced him in the direction of Quinean holism.

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