Before a new scientific theory is generally accepted, it must undergo rigorous testing and validation through experimentation and observation. Peer review is essential, where other experts evaluate the research for its methodology, accuracy, and reproducibility. Additionally, the theory should demonstrate explanatory power and consistency with existing knowledge, ideally being able to predict new phenomena. Only after these criteria are met and the scientific community reaches a consensus can the theory gain acceptance.
Scientific law means it WILL happen and i don't remeber scientific theroy. Sorry!
My opinion is that freedom and funding of scientific research is the most important issue today. It has become a common practice of today's governments to regulate what scientists are allowed to research, with what funding, where their funding comes from, and what results they are allowed to report. Governments have been attempting to control scientific progress and scientific results. Overall this only inhibits the scientific community as a whole and slows down the further development of the human race. This is the most important matter in the scientific community in my opinion, for it can effect every field of science and can happen anywhere in the world.
how does this happen in earth
a scientific intuition has the gut feeling to intuitively predict that something will happen. this prediction is based an scientific training and an understanding a scientific principles.
For a hypothesis to become a theory, it needs to be supported by numerous, well-designed experiments that consistently yield the same results. Additionally, the scientific community must widely accept the hypothesis as being a reliable explanation for the observed phenomena.
Nope, Polar Shift is all hypothesis and conjecture. The scientific community is not even sure that it has ever happen here on Earth.
Before a new scientific theory is generally accepted, it must undergo rigorous testing and validation through experimentation and observation. Peer review is essential, where other experts evaluate the research for its methodology, accuracy, and reproducibility. Additionally, the theory should demonstrate explanatory power and consistency with existing knowledge, ideally being able to predict new phenomena. Only after these criteria are met and the scientific community reaches a consensus can the theory gain acceptance.
the community will turn evil.
there will be more crimes happen in the community....
A scientific theory is something that SHOULD happen each time and experiment is performed. A scientific law is something that WILL happen every time. Like if you drop something, it's a scientific law that it will hit the floor.
Scientific law means it WILL happen and i don't remeber scientific theroy. Sorry!
My opinion is that freedom and funding of scientific research is the most important issue today. It has become a common practice of today's governments to regulate what scientists are allowed to research, with what funding, where their funding comes from, and what results they are allowed to report. Governments have been attempting to control scientific progress and scientific results. Overall this only inhibits the scientific community as a whole and slows down the further development of the human race. This is the most important matter in the scientific community in my opinion, for it can effect every field of science and can happen anywhere in the world.
A scientific hypothesis is an educated guess of what will happen in the experiment. A scientific theory is someone's thoughts on why something happened in an experiment. However, this cannot be proven. The opposite of this is a scientific law. This is statement of what will always happen under the same conditions.
The word for seeing things before they happen is "precognition." It refers to the ability to perceive or predict future events, often considered a form of extrasensory perception. While precognition is a popular concept in paranormal discussions and fiction, it lacks scientific validation.
Scientific law
If a population that was part of a community were to die,it wouldn't affect a community very much.