- Mon Sep 16, 2019 1:38 pm
#68174
Hi Jules,
Passage A's first paragraph presents Karl Popper's theory of negative evidence, which is that a single counterexample to a theory (a black swan is a counterexample to the theory that "all swans are white") disproves that theory. The rest of the first paragraph weaves in the author's initial critique of Popper (that Popper gives negative evidence too much power, when he treats positive evidence as having "no value" and negative evidence as "tantamount to disproof"), as well as a little more information on how Popper used his theory, i.e. that scientific research is about "searching for evidence that would disprove" theories.
The second paragraph of passage A is the author of Passage A's critique of Popper's theory, that it "does not capture the actual situation that scientists face." In other words, the author spends most of paragraph 2 illustrating how Popper's theory is too simplistic. If a theory entails a direct prediction (the theory that "all swans are white" entails the prediction that every swan we see will be white), then if we show that prediction is false (through the negative evidence of the black swan, for example) we disprove the theory. But the author says that scientific theories are rarely so direct in their predictions, and they require auxiliary premises in order to make predictions. So if a theory's prediction turns out to be false, it might be a problem with the theory or it might be a problem with the auxiliary premises. And we don't know which of those auxiliary premises is false in most situations, so negative evidence by itself shouldn't be taken as automatic disproof of a theory (negative evidence might be disproving one of the auxiliary premises).
Passage B presents two scientific scenarios involving a theory whose predictions turned out to be wrong. In the first paragraph, the theory about Neptune's orbit was wrong, not because Newton's theory of gravity was bad but because an auxiliary assumption (that there were no planets nearby) turned out to be wrong. So the "negative evidence" of Neptune's actual orbit didn't end up disproving Newton's theory.
In the second paragraph of passage B, the theory about Mercury's orbit was wrong, and no auxiliary premises or assumptions changed this conclusion (since there was no additional planet to affect Mercury's orbit), so Mercury's actual orbit turned out to disprove Newton's theory of gravity (and validate Einstein's theory).
Does that help to clarify the passages? Let us know!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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