Dave Rogers
Bandaged ice that stampedes inexpensively through
I didn't say that I don't know how to handle ad hoc hypotheses. You must have misunderstood something I said.
It would be this:
So what makes the use of an ad hoc hypothesis legitimate? I confess that I am not clear about this.
Which suggests that you don't know in what circumstances ad hoc hypotheses are legitimate, and hence how they should be treated.
You cannot ask what philosophers have said "in addition to scientists" about ad hoc hypotheses because scientists have almost never explained ad hoc hypotheses outside the framework of philosophy. Therefore, what is said about ad hoc hypotheses has been said mainly by philosophers or scientist-philosophers.
Well, quite. In my over thirty years as a scientist, I've never actually had to consider the problem of what constitutes an as hoc hypothesis and what doesn't; I've simply applied the normal rules of the scientific method. It seems to me that the problem of ad hoc hypotheses is identified, defined and solved by philosophers in isolation while, for the most part, scientists just get on with doing science.
It seems to me that what you don't understand is that standard science works with particular rules.
No doubt you understand these things far better than I, a scientist for most of my life, ever possibly can.
Dave
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