The difference being that the scientific method demonstrably works, which is how come we're communicating by typing letters in to computers.
I read this a lot in the forums, but it's not quite correct. You could demonstrate it to someone with the background necessary to understand it, but for most people, your demonstration would consist of: "Watch as I press these keys and letters appear on the screen. Press a few more keys and others, even on the other side of the world, can see them too."
Do I care if there are transistors and logic gates, fiber optics and routing? Nope. For all the demonstrating going on, it might just as well be magical ants and ant-tenna technology.
That's the problem. This same group, when shown an emeter, and seeing the needle jump for whatever reason, is told, "That there is science, an undiscovered and unknown science." They've got essentially the same demonstration. The flaw is not in the facts or the truth, the flaw is in the person who doesn't grasp the meaning behind the facts.
I'll go even further -- they don't want to know it isn't supersecret, hidden tech. They don't want to know because then the mystery and the belief disappears.
I think skeptics miss this, at least if I am to judge by what's offered up. Like soylent green, Scientology is made of people.
Facts do not have the force we would like them to. First of all because no one can be bothered to examine them, but secondly, and perhaps more to the point --
they don't care.
In skeptic town, facts rule the day (or should). But these folks aren't living in skeptic town. They are just visiting to see the strange lifeforms.