Define ‘Impossibility’ for Theoretical Paradigms

Clarify and formalize what it means for a scientific paradigm—specifically, theories that seek to explain dark phenomena by modifying gravity—to be deemed impossible, and establish rigorous methodological criteria by which such impossibility could be demonstrated.

Background

In critiquing eliminative reasoning invoked to justify dark matter (e.g., Holmes’s dictum), the author argues that applying elimination at the level of paradigm would require proving that modified gravity theories are impossible. The author notes that such proof has not been provided and raises a conceptual uncertainty about the very meaning of deeming a paradigm ‘impossible’.

Resolving this methodological and semantic question is essential for assessing eliminative arguments in the dark matter versus modified gravity debate and for determining legitimate grounds on which entire paradigms might be ruled out.

References

This has, to my knowledge, not been done, and in addition it is unclear what it would even mean for a theoretical paradigm to be deemed impossible.

Dark Matter: Explanatory Unification and Historical Continuity (2412.13404 - Allzén, 18 Dec 2024) in Section “Explanation and dark matter” (discussion of eliminative reasoning in relation to Einasto 2010)