It doesn't find Truth, it finds truth.
All too true, I just can't help it that the basic assumptions that underlie something like science, are
to me just as believable as the basic assumptions that underlie Religion X, which makes both of their truths equally valid. If you talk about predictions: Science yields better cars, religion yields better answers-to-life-questions and solace. There's a tool for every job, but you have to make sure you use the right one at the right time. Being able to predict the future doesn't make you any more "true", IMNSHO.
And are you constantly searching for ways to test your hypotheses?
The point is, if you have no intention of ever finding which of your contradictory ideas are true, they're all... well, equally useless.
Sure I am, I just haven't found any good methods yet.
I've got a few though. For instance I test ideas against my most basic assumptions, one of which is the long-term survival of the human species (or its descendants). From that, I gathered that "doing good" to other people is a "good" thing, since social structures and "being nice" to eachother strenghtens our chance of survival. I also learned (later on) that strife and "doing bad" is actually necessary to maintain a strong society, as a society without criminals is vulnerable to when someone does decide to perform criminal acts. It's just not up to me to perform that task, plenty of volunteers out there
How did/do I test my most basic assumptions? By denying them, and trying to do the opposite. When it feels so unnatural that I disgust myself doing it, I feel reasonably sure that it's still there, so they have mostly an emotional basis. This suits me fine, as most people act on emotional bases but just deny that it's so, and start making up all kinds of "reasons" about why their responses weren't emotional but rational. Neurological research has shown that justification of your actions after they are done happens all the time.
They can find the question before forming a hypothesis, thus making your "You only discover things by contradicting that what we think we already know." statement false.
I was about to say you're right but after reading it again I realise that I have no idea what you mean.