I have never seen an electron, but I have a theory I can test that tells me they exist. Where is the testable theory that proves viruses don't exist?
If we have a hypothesis that predicts certain outcomes, and those outcomes appear on a reliable basis, then we have a good theory. Arguments to the contrary need to provide an alternate t…
I have never seen an electron, but I have a theory I can test that tells me they exist. Where is the testable theory that proves viruses don't exist?
If we have a hypothesis that predicts certain outcomes, and those outcomes appear on a reliable basis, then we have a good theory. Arguments to the contrary need to provide an alternate testable hypothesis. Anything else is just speculation, no matter how many claims are made in its defence.
I have never seen an electron, but I have a theory I can test that tells me they exist. Where is the testable theory that proves viruses don't exist?
If we have a hypothesis that predicts certain outcomes, and those outcomes appear on a reliable basis, then we have a good theory. Arguments to the contrary need to provide an alternate testable hypothesis. Anything else is just speculation, no matter how many claims are made in its defence.