UBERDOINK
Skilled Investigator
The sad fact about this type of verification is that, if one is setting out to prove a certain premise, he can most likely find *some* way to do it.
There have been multiple empirical studies that say this is true. It's called "confirmation bias" or "narrative fallacy", and it has been proven that the science establishment suffer most from this.
Confirmation bias states that people will naturally "find" proof of their theory, unaware that they have forced that proof to "fit".
Narrative Fallacy is basically the same thing, but says people will see data that fits into a pre-defined and accepted narrative, i.e. evolution for example. So other theory's or explanations for something are not even considered, or possibly even thought of, because of this foundational narrative that the scientist has already bought into clouds perception.
There are lots of cool studies on this, but an easy to read one is a book called The Black Swan. Which states that all one has to do to prove all swans aren't white (which was believed until the 19th century) is to find one black swan. NOT a flock, or even a testable scientific model of swans.
That's what science lacks, is the ability to address those "anomalies" that are set to the side because they don't fit any theory.
Remember Darwin said the co-creator of evolution was Alfred Russel Wallace, who believed God used evolution to create the universe, and it was Huxley, an atheist, that helps marginalize Wallace's work. So even at the foundation of things, bias shaped our current Narrative.