Let's assume(because I have no idea if you're even telling the truth) you are correct and we completely ignore that the Scientific Method a whole host of modern scientific equipment was not yet developed.
Do tell. How was this this belief overturned?
Do you have anything? Anything at all?
Quite a bit, as a matter of fact:
"Isaac Newton and other savants in the 1600s were well aware of the myriad reports throughout history of stones falling from the sky, but summarily dismissed them as folk tales and so much 'vulgar superstition'. They would not gainsay 2000 years of the wisdom of their hero Aristotle who had decreed that no small bodies exist in space beyond the Earth and her Moon, and that the Earth is at the center of the solar system. The Sun, they believed, revolves around the Earth.
"Then, at the end of the 1700s, a series of remarkable infalls of meteorites began. Physicist Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (1744-1799) witnessed a bright, spindle-shaped fireball at Gottingen on November 12, 1791 at 6:30 p.m., and shared his unworldly experience with German physicist Ernst F. Chladni (1756-1827). Chladni became so enthralled with Lichtenberg’s experience, he furiously researched fireballs and falling bodies in the Gottingen library for the next three weeks. 'Chladni found that the descriptions were so astonishingly similar from place to place and century to century that, to his lawyer’s ear, the eyewitnesses were telling the truth: falling masses of iron and stone are genuine natural phenomena and not the fantasies of unlettered observers.'
"Chladni published a little book in 1794 in which he proposed that meteor-stones and iron masses enter the atmosphere from cosmic space and form fireballs as they plunge to Earth, thereby reviving the Anaxagoran idea that things falling from the sky were small bodies from space. Chladni saw no physical basis for the claim that outer space is empty and proclaimed that 'to deny their presence is as arbitrary as to assert it; unless we assume that the universe has remained completely unchanged from the beginning, we must admit that changes have taken place in planets—or in whole planetary systems. The evidence, he said, favors the latter conclusion, and observations, not unproved hypotheses, should decide the matter.' Many savants at the time rebuked him for his 'use of eyewitness reports, which they equated with folk tales, and his flouting of the rules of the Aristotelian-Newtonian view of the cosmos.' He did not withdraw his views. In the midst of the criticism, a magnificent shower of stones occurred in the city of Siena in Tuscany, Italy . . .
"On April 26, 1803, at 1:00 p.m. in a clear sky, a fireball coursed northwestward out of a single high, gray cloud near L’Aigle, Normandy, France. Between 2000 and 3000 thousand stones accompanied by loud hissing sounds fell into the fields following three loud detonations. Thunderous reverberations lasted for ten minutes. The stones showed black crusts and ranged up to 18 pounds. Many people witnessed the stone shower.
"French chemist and Minister of the Interior Jean-Antoine Chaptal (1756-1832) dispatched mineralogist Jean-Baptiste Biot, noted earlier in a passage by Velikovsky, to gather more data on the fireball’s trajectory and the extent of the fall. His assessment agreed with the Chladni hypotheses.
"Doubting savants finally agreed that stones may fall from the sky, but continued to dispute how the stones got into the sky in the first place." (footnotes omitted). See
http://www.semp.us/publications/biot_reader.php?BiotID=452
Who's discounting it purely from existing orthodoxy? It's being discounted because it contradicts what is known and that it has failed repeatedly.
What do you have?
So? Do you actually have anything? Anything at all?
Again, Wiseman was asked: "I noticed that you were already interviewed in the article ('Professor Richard Wiseman, a psychologist at the University of Hertfordshire, refuses to believe in remote viewing.') but I was wondering what was meant by 'I agree that by the standards of any other area of science that remote viewing is proven.' Is it a misquote?
"The response?
“'It is a slight misquote, because I was using the term in the more general sense of ESP – that is, I was not talking about remote viewing per se, but rather Ganzfeld, etc as well. I think that they do meet the usual standards for a normal claim, but are not convincing enough for an extraordinary claim.'” See
http://podblack.com/2009/09/dr-richard-wiseman-on-remote-viewing-in-the-daily-mail-clarification/