Source: wikibot/popper-s-experiment

= Popper's experiment
{wiki=Popper's_experiment}

Karl Popper did not conduct a specific experiment that is commonly referred to as "Popper's experiment." Instead, he is well-known for his contributions to the philosophy of science, particularly for his criterion of falsifiability as a demarcation between scientific and non-scientific theories. Popper argued that for a theory to be considered scientific, it must be falsifiable, meaning that it should make predictions that can be tested and potentially proven false by observations or experiments.