Actually R.A.F it is a basic notion that runs through all scientific disciplines
Fortunately, your ideas have been evaluated, so this "weird" opinion of yours can be safely ignored.
But I am curious as to where you got such a ridiculous idea...or did you just make it up, yourself, because it "sound good" to you??
Actually R.A.F it is a basic notion that runs through all scientific disciplines.
I wish I could take credit for it, but sadly, I cannot. Karl Popper the Viennese/turned Brit philosopher of science is typically given credit. Popper is generally considered the most important philosopher of science of the 20th century.
Popper formalized the notion that a scientific idea, say "Einstein's General Relativity", must be "FALSIFIABLE", vulnerable to inauthentication if it is to be worth anything.
If one pauses for a moment, Popper has little more than a keen grasp of the obvious. But it is an important piece of obvious, for if a scientific idea cannot be shown to be wrong, if it is in no way vulnerable, then it is not testable in any sense, and so really tells us nothing at all about the world, nothing definite anyway. As "science", it is meaningless. In such a case, where falsifiability is not a possibility, there is no experiment that can be done, no observation that can be made that can show the scientist making the hypothesis to be correct, or prove her/him wrong. As such, untestable notions, untestable systems of thought, though perhaps useful, are not scientific.
Marxism and Freudian Systems are classically viewed as systems of thought that are pseudoscientific in the sense of "true science", non-pseudoscience, being something which is testable. Freud's notions work in every case, as do Marx's. They take no risks for they simply presume themselves to be true from the get go. As such, they cannot be true in a scientifically meaningful way.
Back to Einstein. Some thought he was crazy when he encouraged Eddington to go off and prove him right or wrong in 1919 by way of photographing the
May 1919 solar eclipse. Not that Einstein wasn't confident, but some thought it was a reckless risk, exposing all his hard work to an experiment(an eclipse photographing) that might falsify general relativity. I mean it only took the guy ten years and turned him white after all. No big deal to have it all proven wrong in a flash, or more appropriately, by way of a lack of one. All that white hair for nothing? But we all know how that went. How it turned out. When all was said and done.
Modern scientists all operate by way of Popper's general notion of science being falsifiable. You have an idea and go out into the world and test it by way of experiment, experiment that one's peers can repeat, by way of observation, observation that one's peers can repeat. If your idea lacks this feature of testability, falsifiability, then it is not science, not modern science anyway, not science as conventionally viewed by the women and men who identify themselves as scientists on this day, 10/15/2011.
Darwinism, because it is not falsifiable, falls into the Marxist, Freudian, pseudoscience category. Useful yes, scientific, no.