The psychologist
Harry Guntrip wrote that its publication "greatly stimulated the discussion of the nature of scientific knowledge", including by philosophers who did not completely agree with Popper, such as
Thomas Kuhn and
Horace Romano Harré. The psychiatrist
Carl Jung, founder of
analytical psychology, valued the work. The biographer
Vincent Brome recalls Jung remarking in 1938 that it exposed "some of the shortcomings of science". The philosopher
Paul Ricœur endorsed "procedures of invalidation" similar to Popper's criteria for falsifiability. The historian
Peter Gay described the work as "an important treatise in epistemology". The philosopher
Bryan Magee considered Popper's criticisms of
logical positivism "devastating". In his view, Popper's most important argument against logical positivism is that, while it claimed to be a scientific theory of the world, its central tenet, the
verification principle, effectively destroyed all of science. The physicists
Alan Sokal and
Jean Bricmont argued that critiques of Popper's work have provoked an "irrationalist drift", and that a significant part of the problems that currently affect the philosophy of science "can be traced to ambiguities or inadequacies" in
The Logic of Scientific Discovery. The essayist
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, in his book
The Black Swan, mentions Popper's theory of falsification as a way to combat the effects of
confirmation bias, crediting his "insight concerning the fundamental, severe, and incurable unpredictability of the world." ==Notes==