- Wed Aug 23, 2017 3:47 pm
#38712
As you said, the existence of the black swan disproved the idea "all swans are white." Since we are asked to find something analogous to this in the rejection of Newton's theories, we want the object, whose existence disproved an old idea. Because there was no nearby planet, Mercury's orbit alone disproved Newton's theory.
According to lines 52-56, to explain the existence of Mercury's orbit using Newtonian physics, Scientists hypothesized a planet called Vulcan. Since Vulcan does not exist, some scientists "began to think that perhaps Newton's laws were in error." Just as the existence of black swans made biologists question the hypothesis that all swans are white, the existence of Mercury's orbit made physicists question the theories of Newton.
Both Mercury and black swans serve as negative evidence; they undermined the existing theories.
The discovery of Neptune served as positive evidence for a Newtonian explanation of Uranus's orbit; it supported the existing theory.