Yea, that's it. Also includes that there is no such thing as "pure" science. All science is applied science...and theories shouldn't be classed as more or less "true" than each other, because "truth" doesn't apply to theories, only to function in the system. Only the observable can be evaluated as true, all theories have non-observable elements, therefore can't be called true.peter wrote: idea that it was the 'predictive value' of the models that was important rather than their exact correspondance to reality.
Kinda like 1+1=2 and trying to say the plus sign is "true." I'm not sure how good that analogy is, but I think it's fairly accurate at least metaphorically.
Most of the criticism IIRC is variations on the idea that the line between observable and theoretical is not clean, precise, hard [and maybe not real...a bit of a suggestion that the two are on the same continuum]
That's pretty much the limit of what I recall about it...except that Popper didn't like it at all.
As for the story, it really requires voice and body language to tell effectively. But it starts with painting a theater concept, ends with a second stop and frisk from the cops, and in between, among other things, a 10mile urban hike to UCLA to try and talk with an astronomy professor.