What you are describing is Karl Popper's classical definition for a pseudoscience i.e. unfalsifiability. When no test could serve to falsify a theory, you call that theory "pseudoscience", i.e. it is outside the realm of science. You are using the term "stopping condition" where Popper uses the word "test".
What you are describing is Karl Popper's classical definition for a pseudoscience i.e. unfalsifiability. When no test could serve to falsify a theory, you call that theory "pseudoscience", i.e. it is outside the realm of science. You are using the term "stopping condition" where Popper uses the word "test".
What you are describing is Karl Popper's classical definition for a pseudoscience i.e. unfalsifiability. When no test could serve to falsify a theory, you call that theory "pseudoscience", i.e. it is outside the realm of science. You are using the term "stopping condition" where Popper uses the word "test".