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pessimistic induction  

Definition

  • A pessimistic induction is an argument that makes use of empirical claims about the history of science—especially accounts of past theories that are false by our lights—to argue that we have little reason to believe that our own theories are even approximately true, or refer to real objects, in the parts of their claims that go beyond matters observable by the human senses. These are claims such as that electrons have spin, since electrons are too small to observe directly with the human eye. [Source: Encyclopedia of Philosophy and the Social Sciences; Pessimistic Induction]

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https://concepts.sagepub.com/social-science/concept/pessimistic_induction

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