No matter how many proofs you layer on top of an axiom, it's still going to be based on faith at the lowest level, and what scares me is the belief people will put in anything 'proven' by such scientific means. In the modern day world, religion is far more tolerant of criticism to itself than science - aka 'fact'.
This is, quite simply, wrong. When evidence contrary to any scientific principle is presented, whether it's regarded as "fact", "law", "axiom", or what-have-you, it is revised. That's just how it works. Science, as I've stated, does not claim to be about absolute truth and adapts to the universe as it continues to be observed. This isn't to say that every single scientist is completely open-minded and reasonable, but science itself works on that premise.
Also, emperical science isn't useful in any way, in diluting itself of absolute truth it's saying "Ok, don't bother refuting this, it's just emperical observation, but hey look what it proves!". It's such an immature tactic to say that a theory is not open to argument before proposing it. And if it can't stand up to argument, it's worthless.
Nice strawman, but no. For one thing, theories ARE open to argument. If a theory is disproven in argument, it's unscientific to still believe it.
What I meant to say is that scientific theory is not meant to state "this is absolutely, positively, how the world works". It's more along the lines of "this is a working model of how the world seems to work, for use as a predictive and explanatory tool for understanding, based on observed patterns, subject to change if these patterns are seen to not respect observed patterns in the future." It doesn't say "don't bother refuting this"; of course you can refute it. Hell, for a theory to BE scientific it MUST be falsifiable, which is to say, there must hypothetically be some way to prove it false if it is.
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But these are my own biases, I once repeatedly questioned my friend, a mathematician, about how .999r = 1 , eventually he exclaimed, "Maths isn't 'truth'! It's just based on axioms/rules". Let's hope true scientists and mathematicians don't rely on axioms and suchlike.
The reason your biases are as such are, as I've explained, you don't understand how science works or what it is for. There is nothing wrong with founding science and mathematics upon seemingly-arbitrary rules as long as those rules
are functional and sufficiently explain and predict how the world appears to work. That is their function. No more, no less.
Science (and even math) making no statement of absolute truth (outside of their own axioms and boundaries) does not make it useless or invalid. They're perfectly useful within whichever context they apply to.