working hypothesis

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

working hypothesis (plural working hypotheses)

  1. A hypothesis that is unverified yet tentatively chosen as a best guess to build upon or put effort into its verification.
    • 1927, Bertrand Russell, An Outline of Philosophy:
      We do not know that this is the case, but it is an hypothesis which cannot be refuted and is simpler than any other possible hypothesis. I shall therefore adopt it as a working hypothesis in what follows.
    • 1964, James B. Pritchard, Winery, Defenses, and Soundings at Gibeon:
      By a process of elimination of the various possibilities we have set up a working hypothesis that the rock-cut installation was for the purpose of making and storing wine.
    • 1968, Donald D. Clayton, Principles of Stellar Evolution and Nucleosynthesis:
      Astronomers at one time considered the possibility that all stars had the same luminosity as the sun and tried to derive the distances of stars from how bright they appeared to be. This working hypothesis, although a good idea at the time, led to a number of inconsistencies.
    • 1979, R. M. Martin, Pragmatics, Truth, and Language:
      Brand thinks it is a "plausible working hypothesis" that properties are legitimate objects, as good as "specifiable groupings of particulars" - which presumably sets or classes are.

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