If you define falsifiable as synonymous with verifiable then this helps me understand your thinking.
You can't have one without the other. How would something be falsifiable, if it isn't testable?
When something is verifiable, it means it can possibly be known as true
Not exactly. It can be shown as
accurate.
There is no "showing true".
As Krauss once said: "
Science is not in the business of proving things. Science is in the business of DISproving things".
In other words: science can't tell you what models are absolutely true. But it CAN tell you which models are absolutely incorrect.
So you believe no one can have true knowledge because there's always a chance they're wrong? I would disagree with that.
In the sense of absolute certainty, yes.
Also keep in mind that I'm talking about models of explanation here. Hypothesis and theories.
This ties into my above question - how do you believe facts are determined?
Facts are just pieces of data. Facts require explanation. It's the explanatory models that I am talking about here. Facts don't require evidence. Facts ARE the evidence.
Explanatory model (hypothesis/theories) require evidence.
Can someone even have true knowledge of a fact? If so, then there'd be no chance that they're wrong.
Actually, facts can be wrong as well. Your observation can be misguided. Your measurement can be inacurate. Your measuring device can be miscalibrated.
All kinds of things can possibly go wrong when gathering facts.
Do you have true knowledge of the facts about your "undetectable pet dragon"?
About as true as the facts of theistic claims.
For instance; do you know it's just something you made up in your mind?
Not relevant. You made a statement and I responded to that statement.
You said something is "fact until proven wrong".
Clearly, that is incorrect as a sweeping statement...
It doesn't matter how sincere I am in my claim about a pet dragon.
Sincerity has no bearing on the underlying accuracy.