A Law
The hypothesis which has been tested and verified repeatedly by tests is called theory.
A theory.
A theory. If it has been proven and is replicatable, it is a fact.
In maths, a conjuncture is a theory or statement which is most likely true but not yet proven.
A theory has been proven and has lots of data to back it up while a hypothesis is simply an educated guess that has some data to back it up.
A theory
A law describes a consistent relationship or pattern in nature that has been observed and verified through repeated experiments or observations. It is a statement of a phenomenon that consistently behaves in a predictable way under certain conditions. A theory, on the other hand, is an explanation or model that attempts to describe why a law operates as it does, based on a broader framework of principles and concepts. It is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that is supported by evidence and has undergone rigorous testing.
It has been proven, as opposed to not being disproven. Theories have not been dis proven, but have not been proven, or are unable to be proven, but are otherwise acceptable as factual.
A hypothesis, or group of hypotheses, that is accepted as consistently valid is a theory. Either a hypothesis or a theory can be ultimately disproven. One definition of a theory is an accepted hypothesis.
It is a theory that can't be scientifically proven or disproven. As a theory, it's a belief or principle that guides the people who believe in it. One God is as good a theory as any other and by far the most widely accepted.
1. I believe that theories can only be disproven, not proven. i.e. You create a theory and then you try to disprove it, if you can't then you can consider that theory to be true (convicing other people may be more difficult however). 2. I think the theory you describe is disproven as and todays equivalent is what we now know as 'oxidation'.
Yes
If it was proven it wouldn't be called a "theory"
Well yeah. Its called a theory because it wasn't proven right yet. Once proven right, its called a fact.
No. A theory cannot be disproven. This is a corollary of the fact that a theory cannot be proven either; otherwise it would be a theorem.The correct term for a theory being consistent with evidence and reliable in predictions is validated. The correct term for not being validated, or an overturning of validation, is invalidated.
The hypothesis which has been tested and verified repeatedly by tests is called theory.
A theorem is an unproven statement; a proven statement is a fact. A theory is a set of theorems; a theory which has been proven can be called a law or a rule.