I agree with your general view, but I came to the same view by a more conventional route: I got a PhD in philosophy of science. If you study philosophy of science, you soon find that nobody really knows what science is. The “Science” you describe is essentially Popper’s view of science, which has been extensively criticized and revised by later philosophers. For example, how can you falsify a theory? You need a fact (an “observation”) that conflicts with the theory. But what is a fact, if not a true mini-theory? And how can you know that it is true, if theories can be falsified, but not proven? I studied philosophy because I was looking for a rational foundation for understanding the world; something like what Descartes promised with “cogito ergo sum”. I soon learned that there is no such foundation. Making a rational model of the world is not like making a home, where the first step is to build a solid foundation. It is more like trying to patch a hole in a sinking ship, where you don’t have the luxury of starting from scratch. I view science as an evolutionary process. Changes must be made in small increments: “Natura non facit saltus”.
One flaw I see in your post is that the rule “You cannot trust any rule” applies recursively to itself. (Anything you can do, I can do meta.) I would say “Doubt everything, but one at a time, not all at once.”
I agree with your general view, but I came to the same view by a more conventional route: I got a PhD in philosophy of science. If you study philosophy of science, you soon find that nobody really knows what science is. The “Science” you describe is essentially Popper’s view of science, which has been extensively criticized and revised by later philosophers. For example, how can you falsify a theory? You need a fact (an “observation”) that conflicts with the theory. But what is a fact, if not a true mini-theory? And how can you know that it is true, if theories can be falsified, but not proven? I studied philosophy because I was looking for a rational foundation for understanding the world; something like what Descartes promised with “cogito ergo sum”. I soon learned that there is no such foundation. Making a rational model of the world is not like making a home, where the first step is to build a solid foundation. It is more like trying to patch a hole in a sinking ship, where you don’t have the luxury of starting from scratch. I view science as an evolutionary process. Changes must be made in small increments: “Natura non facit saltus”.
One flaw I see in your post is that the rule “You cannot trust any rule” applies recursively to itself. (Anything you can do, I can do meta.) I would say “Doubt everything, but one at a time, not all at once.”