Or it may be that people like Weinberg, Mayr and Einstein have a pretty good handle on what it means, in general, to do science.
Sure it could. In general, and also, perhaps, in this specific instance. Goes without saying, right? That is precisely why this question, else we could have simply discarded that observation, and this discussion, without further ado.
The point is, not everything one scientist says to another in general terms is necessarily scientific, or even correct, even when it has to do with science.
... Can you define "current times" then, last 20 years? The last 40 years?
Sure. 20 years, 40 years, would be fine.
OK, but later, it might take a little longer.
Please, take your time. No rush at all.
If I am to contradict some strongly held myths (like the idea that science was invented whole out of thin air by Galileo)
Who has shown themselves to be holding strongly held myths of that nature, and why is that of such relevance here that you feel the need to say this to me?
I seem to perceive an implied strawman here. Let go of it, please.
, then I had better get my wording right.
(Edited because I have no idea whether or not what I originally said was insensitive to other cultures).
I don't see why apologists for the philosophy of science feel the need to flail around and contort themselves endlessly, instead of simply producing one single piece of evidence, or a straightforward answer to the question actually raised.
I've given up, now, on getting a clear answer on this from David Mo. In your case also, to simply explain your earlier remark that the philosophy of science is simply part of, perhaps a subset of, the scientific method, shouldn't be such a difficult thing, should it? There's no need to tread eggshells: your observation seemed different than what I think, and also not exactly the same as what easily available sources like Wikipedia have to say, so my question was just a simple request for clarification and some explanation, not (hopefully!) the prelude to (yet another!) endless debate.
eta:
Okay, on second thoughts, let me follow your example and precisely word my questions to you, in order to prevent any possible misunderstandings:
(a) Can you expand on your comment that philosophy of science is simply part of the scientific method itself, not just historically but in practice today? A superficial read (Wikipedia) does not seem to bear you out. And, like you yourself said, the posts in this on thread, including those from those plugging the case for philosophy of science, don't seem to bear this out either.
(b) What some scientist has to say to another in general terms about philosophy of science may be interesting and not necessarily irrelevant, but can you produce any evidencr of a case where philosophy of sciencre has been of concrete use, in recent times, in actually helping to formulate or to accept/reject some hypothesis, in ways that would not have been possible without a knowledge of what philosophy of science has to say?
(Of course, depending on your answer to question-a, question-b may well turn out to be moot.)
Just answer these two questions clearly, please -- not as a challenge but simply to clarify your position to someone who'd like to know better what you mean -- without worrying about what religious or cultural or gendered or any other sensibilities you might accidentally offend. Just a single clearly worded post will probably suffice to answer, and put an end to, what I asked.