
Evidence may support multiple theories
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Evidence may support multiple theories
Underdetermination of theory by data (UTD) suggests that evidence available at any given time may not be sufficient to determine which scientific theory to believe in. This occurs when the available evidence is insufficient to uniquely identify a single theory, allowing for multiple theories to be consistent with the same evidence.
Example
If all that was known was that exactly $10 were spent on apples and oranges, with apples costing $1 and oranges $2, one could eliminate some possibilities (e.g., 6 oranges could not have been purchased), but not know the specific combination of apples and oranges purchased. This illustrates how evidence can support multiple theories (e.g., different combinations of apples and oranges).
Remember this
Understanding underdetermination is crucial for recognizing the limitations of empirical evidence in theory choice and the potential for multiple valid interpretations of the same data.
Text adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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