AstroGeek wrote:
Science only disproves. It never fully proves. It merely gets to the point where something is so strongly implied that it can be accepted as "true."
Well, there are still truths found through science, and the science can be said to "prove" something for all practical purposes. I mean, your last sentence seems no more different for science than it does for any inquiry. There are things people(including scientists) can call "scientific truths".
I think the issue here is that while falsificationism is a model of science and one very popular based upon the influence of Karl Popper, it isn't the only model, and it probably isn't the correct model either, but rather a useful partial model. Science does a lot more than just disproving things, as theories are organizations of facts, but they aren't just the results of chiseling away impossibilities, but rather creating a new hypothesis requires a lot of ingenuity and hypotheses and theories organize the scientific discipline's search for knowledge. It isn't just a matter of cutting things away. So, the falsificationist metaphor is like sculpting, or brushing away debris to uncover an artifact, but, honestly, I think the better conceptual metaphor is probably more like a murder investigation, or a search, especially given that you have to recognize that science emerged somewhat organically from pre-existing thought structures(nobody really invented science), where pure falsificationism is wholly artificial and insufficient if we have a broad field to search.