SCIENTIFIC HYPOTHESIS ,'.>? 



that it be not destined always to remain an hypothe- 

 sis, but be of such a nature as to be either proved 

 or disproved by that comparison with observed facts 

 which is termed Verification.' 1 This statement is 

 of value in confirming the general distrust of mere 

 hypothesis, and in distinguishing between the unveri- 

 fied and un verifiable presupposition and the 1 

 mate assumption which through verification may be- 

 come established doctrine. 



REFERENCES 



J. Cox, Beyond the Atom, 1913 (Cambridge Manuals of Science 



and Literature). 



R. K. Duncan, The New Knowledge, 1905. 

 H. Poincare, Science and Hypothesis. 



E. Rutherford, Radioactive Substances and their Radiations. 



F. Soddy, The Interpretation of Radium. 



F. Soddy, Matter and Energy (Home University Library). 

 Sir William A. Tilden, Progress of Scientific Chemistry in our Own 

 Time, 1913. 



