scientific fact
Noun: A scientific fact is an observation about the natural world that has been verified through repeated experimentation or measurement and is accepted as true by the scientific community. It is important to note that in science, a fact is not considered absolute or final; it is the best available explanation based on current evidence and is subject to revision if new, contradictory evidence emerges.
A scientific fact is a foundational piece of knowledge upon which scientific theories are built. It is used to describe an empirical reality that is consistently observable and measurable. - It is typically presented as a statement of what is, based on collective, verified data. - The term emphasizes the rigorous process of confirmation and the provisional nature of all scientific knowledge.
- In Philosophical Context: The term is often discussed in the philosophy of science to distinguish between observable, confirmable facts and the broader explanatory frameworks (theories) that connect them.
- In Public Discourse: The phrase "scientific fact" is sometimes used to contrast evidence-based conclusions with opinions or misinformation, e.g.,
- Fact (n): A piece of information presented as having objective reality. A scientific fact is a specific type of fact.
- Empirical Observation (n): Information acquired by observation or experimentation, which forms the basis for a scientific fact.
- Law (n): A descriptive generalization about how some aspect of the natural world behaves under stated circumstances, often derived from a collection of facts (e.g., Newton's Laws of Motion).
- Verified observation
- Empirical fact
- Established datum
- Hypothesis: A proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation.
- Theory: A well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that incorporates facts, laws, inferences, and tested hypotheses.
- Myth / Misconception: A widely held but false belief or idea.
- Matter of fact: Something that is undeniably true.
- Fact of life: An unavoidable reality.
- In fact: Used to emphasize the truth of a statement.
- Not a Synonym for "Truth": In science, a fact is not an eternal truth. It is a conclusion so confirmed that it would be unreasonable to withhold provisional assent, but it remains falsifiable.
- Relationship to Theory: A common misconception is that a theory "becomes" a fact when proven. This is incorrect. Theories explain facts; they do not graduate into them. Facts are the , and theories are the and . For example, evolution is both a fact (observed change in heritable traits) and a theory (the explanation via natural selection).
- an observation that has been confirmed repeatedly and is accepted as true (although its truth is never final)