Question
How do I practice falsifiability?
Quick Answer
Select three schemas you currently hold — about yourself, your work, or your field. For each one, write down the specific observation that would prove it wrong. If you cannot name a concrete falsifier, the schema is unfalsifiable in its current form. Rewrite it as a falsifiable claim: state it.
The most direct way to practice falsifiability is through a focused exercise: Select three schemas you currently hold — about yourself, your work, or your field. For each one, write down the specific observation that would prove it wrong. If you cannot name a concrete falsifier, the schema is unfalsifiable in its current form. Rewrite it as a falsifiable claim: state it with enough precision that you could specify a test, a threshold, and a result that would force you to abandon or revise the schema. You should end with three before-and-after pairs: the original unfalsifiable version and its falsifiable replacement.
Common pitfall: Confusing emotional attachment with empirical support. The most dangerous unfalsifiable schemas are not abstract philosophical claims — they are personal beliefs that feel true because you have held them for years. "I am not a creative person." "People like me do not succeed in that field." "I always sabotage good things." These schemas resist falsification not because they are logically immune to evidence but because you unconsciously reinterpret every piece of evidence to fit the existing conclusion. The failure mode is not a lack of data. It is a refusal to specify, in advance, what data would change your mind.
This practice connects to Phase 15 (Schema Validation) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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