- #1
timmdeeg
Gold Member
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Supposed a future theory of Quantum Gravity reconciles Quantum Mechanics with the Theory of General Relativity, is mathematically self-consistent and makes falsifiable predictions which are not testable though.
Can we ever trust a scientific theory which is self-consistent but not testable?
Does self-consistency exclude the case that there exists another approach (aiming to resolve the same problem) which is self-consistent too?
Sorry, I am not sure if this is the right forum for that.
Can we ever trust a scientific theory which is self-consistent but not testable?
Does self-consistency exclude the case that there exists another approach (aiming to resolve the same problem) which is self-consistent too?
Sorry, I am not sure if this is the right forum for that.