falsifiability

(noun)

Quality of being logically capable of being proven false.

Related Terms

  • phenomenology

Examples of falsifiability in the following topics:

  • Psychology and the Scientific Method: From Theory to Conclusion

    • Across all scientific disciplines, the major precepts of the scientific method are verifiability, predictability, falsifiability, and fairness.
    • Falsifiability refers to whether a hypothesis can disproved.
    • For a hypothesis to be falsifiable, it must be logically possible to make an observation or do a physical experiment that would show that there is no support for the hypothesis.
    • It also allows theories to be tested and validated instead of simply being conjectures that could never be verified or falsified.
  • Evaluating the Humanistic Perspective on Personality

    • Because of the subjective nature of the study, psychologists still worry about the falsifiability of the humanistic approach.
  • Freudian Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality

    • In fact, as researchers began to take a more scientific look at his ideas, they found that several were unable to be supported: in order for a theory to be scientifically valid, it must be possible to disprove ("falsify") it with experimental evidence, and many of Freud's notions are not falsifiable.
  • Evaluating the Psychodynamic Approach to Personality

    • He did an entirely qualitative study of the human mind, resulting in theories that were not falsifiable, but rather, open for interpretation.
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