How much knowledge is contained in a theoretical system? |
K = h
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Logico-deductive knowledge is a lossless compression of noise-free systems. Its value is inversely related to complexity and directly related to the extent of domain of application. |
3.1 |
How much knowledge is contained in an empirical system? |
K = k × h
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Empirical knowledge is lossy compression. It is encoded in a theory/methodology whose predictions have a non-zero error. It follows that Kempirical < Ktheoretical. |
3.2 |
How much progress is a field making? |
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Progress occurs to the extent that explanandum and/or explanatory power expand more than the explanans. This is the essence of consilience. |
3.3 |
How reproducible is a research finding? |
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The ratio between the K of a study and its replication Kr is an exponentially declining function of the distance between their systems and/or methodologies. |
3.4 |
What is the value of a null or negative result? |
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The knowledge yielded by a single conclusive negative result is an exponentially declining function of the total number of hypotheses (theories, methods, explanations or outcomes) that remain untested. |
3.5 |
What is the cost of research fabrication, falsification, bias and QRP? |
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The K corrected for a questioned methodology is inversely proportional to the methodology’s relative description length times the bias it generates (B). |
3.6 |
When is a field a pseudoscience? |
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A pseudoscience results from a hyper-biased theory/methodology that produces net negative knowledge. Conversely, a science has . |
3.7 |
What makes a science ‘soft’? |
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Compared to a harder science (H), a softer science (S) yields relatively lower knowledge at the cost of relatively more complex theories and methods. |
3.8 |