In both of my examples involving the ball, a cause is not asserted, only an outcome-- Ball moves in direction of club.
You are reading too much into my statement.
More specifically, rationalwiki states zetecticism is this:
"Zetetic" is an obscure English word coming from Greek through Latin. As an adjective it means "proceeding by inquiry; investigating", and, thus, when used as a noun - "inquirer". It has been used as a something-like-synonym of "skeptic" at least twice.
In the 19th century, the word was used by Flat Earth advocates: Samuel Rowbotham (under the pen name of "Parallax") wrote an anti-round-Earth pamphlet called Zetetic Astronomy and later founded Zetetic Societies in the UK and the USA and edited The Zetetic and Anti-Theorist: a monthly journal of practical cosmography. After his death, Lady Elizabeth Blount established a Universal Zetetic Society that was succeeded in the middle of the 20th century by Samuel Shenton's International Flat Earth Society. The word appears to still be popular among modern-day flat-earthers[1].
In the Flat Earth sense, the term refers to flipping the scientific method on its head and deriving one's observations from testing, with no regards to any hypothesis. Of course, if you did scientific inquiry this way, you'd end up with stating that a sphere is flat just because it looks flat to a relatively minuscule observer on its surface.
The original name of the Skeptical Inquirer magazine was The Zetetic. After Marcello Truzzi's falling out with CSICOP, he appropriated the term "zeteticism" for his brand of "more open minded" skepticism. He started another journal, the Zetetic Scholar.
Literally, question, THEN test.
EG--
"Does my ball go in the direction of my club when I strike it?" made prior to any observation, or structured hypothesis of an outcome.
This is opposite to:
"I notice that the ball goes in the direction of my club. Is this ever false?"
which has the hypothesis about the outcome first, based on observations. It's a test of the observed outcome.
The reason why the zetectic method is bogus, is because it is essentially a mutant form of begging the question, which presupposes that a question is correct, and then proceeding from it. Instead, you start with an observation in science-- something outside which can be measured. That thing exists regardless of the whim, whimsy, or desire of the experimenter, which is what makes it empirical.
EG, the flat earther will go "Is the earth flat?" then go "If the earth is flat, then this will be true." (tests for thing, finds it true-- Concludes earth is flat.)
This is opposition to real science-- "The earth appears to my eyes as flat. I will test if this observation is correct. To do so, I will devise a test that is sure to return positive if my observation is false."
In any event, the statement I made, (that you assert wrongly is zetecticism), is that the data collected (which is an observation made in absence of any causal theory applied-- it is raw observation) can be used to create a model.
The scientific method's first step is observation for a reason Trekkin.
Make an observation.
Ask a question.
Form a hypothesis, or testable explanation.
Make a prediction based on the hypothesis.
Test the prediction.
Iterate: use the results to make new hypotheses or predictions.
The statement that the data collected (which, lacking any original intent except to collect that information) can be used to make a model, is fundamentally correct. It is the starting point for the scientific method.