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arxiv: 1907.02855 · v1 · pith:KKLODLOYnew · submitted 2019-07-05 · ⚛️ physics.hist-ph · gr-qc

Falsifiability of Isolated Spacetime Regions

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 01:58 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.hist-ph gr-qc
keywords falsifiabilityspacetime regionsblack holesevent horizonsBayesian inferenceisolated regionsscientific methodology
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The pith

Physical theories can retain isolated spacetime regions if they satisfy conditional asymptotic provability via Bayesian inference.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper notes that falsifiable physical theories can predict spacetime regions unable to exchange information with each other, for example regions on either side of a black hole event horizon. Strict falsifiability would force observers in one region to discard predictions about the other. The author instead proposes that such regions can meet a weaker standard called conditional asymptotic provability. This standard lets Bayesian inference support or undermine claims about the isolated region over time. The work also examines limits and epistemic effects of adopting this standard.

Core claim

Some physical theories, even being themselves falsifiable, predict the existence of regions of spacetime which are not falsifiable with relation to each other due to their impossibility of mutually exchanging information as, for instance, before and after the event horizon of black holes. If we require scientific theories to be falsifiable, an isolated region should be discarded from scientific models developed by observers in other regions. Here it is proposed that their existence can satisfy a weaker falsifiability condition, here called conditional asymptotic provability, which extend scientific reasoning through Bayesian inference.

What carries the argument

conditional asymptotic provability, the weaker falsifiability condition that extends scientific reasoning to isolated regions through Bayesian inference

If this is right

  • Isolated regions such as those separated by black hole horizons can remain inside scientific models.
  • Overall theories stay falsifiable while still containing statements about non-communicating spacetime parts.
  • Bayesian inference supplies the mechanism for assessing claims about isolated regions asymptotically.
  • Observers in one region can continue to use models that include predictions about causally disconnected regions.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same conditional standard might cover other causally disconnected regions, such as parts of the universe beyond our cosmic horizon.
  • It suggests a way to keep certain multiverse or quantum-gravity predictions inside scientific discourse without direct testing.
  • Long-term accumulation of indirect evidence in the accessible region could gradually strengthen or weaken claims about the isolated part.

Load-bearing premise

Regions unable to exchange information cannot be falsified relative to each other.

What would settle it

A demonstration that Bayesian updates never produce asymptotic confirmation or disconfirmation for any prediction about an isolated region would show the proposed weaker condition does not work.

read the original abstract

In this work it is pointed out that some physical theories, even being themselves falsifiable, predict the existence of regions of spacetime which are not falsifiable with relation to each other due to their impossibility of mutually exchanging information as, for instance, before and after the event horizon of black holes. If we require scientific theories to be falsifiable, an isolated region should be discarded from scientific models developed by observers in other regions. Here it is proposed that their existence can satisfy a weaker falsifiability condition, here called conditional asymptotic provability, which extend scientific reasoning through Bayesian inference. Limitations and some epistemic consequences of this proposal are discussed.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 0 minor

Summary. The paper argues that some falsifiable physical theories predict causally isolated spacetime regions (e.g., inside black hole event horizons) that cannot exchange information and thus are not falsifiable relative to each other. It claims that strict falsifiability would require discarding such regions from models, but proposes retaining them under a weaker condition termed 'conditional asymptotic provability' that incorporates Bayesian inference, while discussing limitations and epistemic consequences.

Significance. If the central argument holds, the proposal could permit scientific theories to include descriptions of inaccessible regions without violating falsifiability, with potential relevance to black hole physics and cosmology. However, the manuscript provides no derivations, formal definitions, or concrete examples of the new condition, and the motivation rests on an unexamined inference from causal isolation to the necessity of either discarding regions or modifying falsifiability standards.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The motivating premise that regions unable to exchange information 'are not falsifiable with relation to each other' and therefore must be discarded to preserve falsifiability is asserted without supporting argument or counterexample. A theory can remain falsifiable via predictions confined to the observer's accessible region (e.g., orbital dynamics or exterior curvature in general relativity), so the inference from 'no mutual information exchange' to 'must discard or weaken falsifiability' does not follow and undercuts the need for conditional asymptotic provability.
  2. [Abstract] Abstract: The proposed 'conditional asymptotic provability' is introduced as an extension via Bayesian inference but is neither formally defined nor shown to be independent of the problem it addresses; without a precise statement of the condition, its relation to standard falsifiability, or any worked example, it is impossible to assess whether the central claim is internally consistent or merely circular.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments. The points raised identify areas where the motivation and the proposed condition require clearer presentation and formalization. We address each comment below and have revised the manuscript to strengthen the argument and add the requested details.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The motivating premise that regions unable to exchange information 'are not falsifiable with relation to each other' and therefore must be discarded to preserve falsifiability is asserted without supporting argument or counterexample. A theory can remain falsifiable via predictions confined to the observer's accessible region (e.g., orbital dynamics or exterior curvature in general relativity), so the inference from 'no mutual information exchange' to 'must discard or weaken falsifiability' does not follow and undercuts the need for conditional asymptotic provability.

    Authors: We agree that the overall theory can remain falsifiable through accessible-region predictions, and the manuscript does not claim otherwise. The core point is narrower: the isolated regions cannot be tested against each other, creating an epistemic question about their inclusion under a strict falsifiability requirement. We accept that the abstract states this premise too briefly without counterexamples or explicit argument. The revised version expands the introduction with a detailed justification, including why causal isolation raises a distinct issue even when the exterior theory is testable, and discusses the GR exterior example to show the distinction. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The proposed 'conditional asymptotic provability' is introduced as an extension via Bayesian inference but is neither formally defined nor shown to be independent of the problem it addresses; without a precise statement of the condition, its relation to standard falsifiability, or any worked example, it is impossible to assess whether the central claim is internally consistent or merely circular.

    Authors: The referee is correct that the submitted version provides only a sketch of conditional asymptotic provability via Bayesian inference without a formal definition, independence proof, or worked example. The discussion section outlines the idea but does not meet the standards of rigor needed for evaluation. We will add a new section containing (i) a precise statement of the condition, (ii) its relation to classical falsifiability, and (iii) a concrete example drawn from black-hole spacetimes, thereby removing any appearance of circularity. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: proposal is a conceptual extension without self-referential reduction

full rationale

The provided abstract and context present a philosophical argument identifying a tension between standard falsifiability and causally disconnected spacetime regions, then proposing 'conditional asymptotic provability' via Bayesian inference as an extension. No equations, fitted parameters, self-citations, or uniqueness theorems appear in the given material. The new condition is introduced explicitly as a suggestion rather than derived from or reducing to the input premises by construction. The derivation chain therefore remains self-contained as an interpretive proposal rather than a tautological renaming or load-bearing self-reference.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 1 invented entities

Only abstract available; ledger extracted from stated premises. The paper relies on the domain assumption that falsifiability is required for scientific theories and introduces one invented concept without independent evidence.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Scientific theories must be falsifiable; isolated regions should be discarded if they violate this.
    Explicitly stated in the abstract as the starting point for the proposal.
invented entities (1)
  • conditional asymptotic provability no independent evidence
    purpose: Weaker falsifiability condition allowing isolated regions via Bayesian inference.
    New term introduced to extend scientific reasoning; no independent evidence or falsifiable handle provided in abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5622 in / 1259 out tokens · 34875 ms · 2026-05-25T01:58:36.695490+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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