Retrodiction

Retrodiction

Retrodiction (or "postdiction", though this should not be confused with the use of the term in criticisms of parapsychological research) is the act of making a "prediction" about the past. This is especially useful when one wishes to test a theory whose actual predictions are too long-term to be of immediate use. One speculates about uncertain events in the more distant past so that the theory would have predicted a known event in the less distant past. This is useful in, for example, the fields of archaeology, climatology, evolutionary biology, financial analysis, forensic science, and cosmology.

Michael Clive Price has written:

A retrodiction occurs when already gathered data is accounted for by a later theoretical advance in a more convincing fashion. The advantage of a retrodiction over a prediction is that the already gathered data is more likely to be free of experimenter bias. An example of a retrodiction is the perihelion shift of Mercury which Newtonian mechanics plus gravity was unable, totally, to account for whilst Einstein's general relativity made short work of it. [ [http://www.hedweb.com/manworld.htm#retrodictions The Everett Interpretation ] ]

Postdiction, in a slightly different sense, is used to evaluate speculative theories such as those formulated by theoretical physicists. In this case it refers to predicting "known" (but not necessarily "past)" events. For example, a theory attempting to extend or replace the standard model that fails to predict the existence of known particles has not met the test of "postdiction".

References

* [http://www.hedweb.com/manworld.htm#retrodictions THE EVERETT FAQ]


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  • rétrodiction — [ʀetʀodiksjɔ̃] n. f. ÉTYM. 1963, Costa de Beauregard, in D. D. L.; de rétro , et diction. → Prédiction. ❖ ♦ Didact. Établissement de la probabilité d un état antérieur à un état observé, et lié à lui par une relation de cause à effet; hypothèse… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • retrodiction — The hypothesis that some event happened in the past, as opposed to the prediction that an event will happen in the future. A successful retrodiction could confirm a theory as much as a successful prediction …   Philosophy dictionary

  • Rétrodiction quantique — La rétrodiction quantique est une approche complémentaire de la physique quantique qui consiste à faire des rétro prédictions, ou rétrodictions, sur les préparations d états quantiques qui auraient pu conduire à un certain résultat de mesure.… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • retrodiction — noun see retrodict …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • retrodiction — noun A form of prediction that deals with the past rather than the future, sometimes useful in testing theories whose actual predictions are too long term to be of immediate use. Syn: postdiction …   Wiktionary

  • retrodiction — [ˌrɛtrə(ʊ) dɪkʃ(ə)n] noun the explanation or interpretation of past events inferred from the laws that are assumed to have governed them. Derivatives retrodict verb Origin C19: from retro + prediction …   English new terms dictionary

  • retrodiction — ret·ro·dic·tion …   English syllables

  • retrodiction — noun see retrodict …   Useful english dictionary

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  • Thought experiment — A thought experiment (from the German Gedankenexperiment ) is a proposal for an experiment that would test a hypothesis or theory but cannot actually be performed due to practical limitations; instead its purpose is to explore the potential… …   Wikipedia

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