Yes
A theory
in real science, anything with the word theory in-front of it means it hasn't been disproven - for example gravity is a theory.
A Law
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.
A theory is useless if it cannot be tested and verified/disproven. That is the purpose of experiments.
One example of a theory that is not falsifiable is the existence of a higher power or deity that cannot be proven or disproven through scientific methods or empirical evidence.
A scintific law is a statement that describes what scientisis expect to happen. A scintififc theory is a well-tested explantion for a range of observations. This answers the question '' How Does Scientific Law Differ From Scientific Theroy?''
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.
The phlogiston theory was a scientific hypothesis that proposed that all combustible materials contain a substance called "phlogiston," which is released during combustion. According to the theory, when a substance burns, it loses phlogiston. This theory has been disproven by modern chemistry.
Yes, chemists believed in the phlogiston theory in the 17th and 18th centuries. It was thought that when substances burned, they released a substance called phlogiston. However, the theory was eventually disproven with the development of modern chemistry.
A conjecture is a proposition that is unproven but appears correct and has not been disproven.