“...[N]ot all that passes for science is science much of what we call science today was once derided and ridiculed by Sir Francis Bacon and other early modern empirical scientists as scholastic obscurantism and metaphysical superstition. This false science was the basis of the political correctness of the Dark Ages. Historians and scientists have labeled it rationalistic science because it seeks to rationalize away common sense and the stubborn facts of sense perception. Today, in the great age of technology, this false conception of science is again passing itself off as true science. Technology is not exactly the same thing as science in the empirical sense. Sure, we have learned to discover, but we are spending the scientific capital built up by past centuries, for we have largely forsaken the path of pure empirical science. It follows that if we have strayed from the path of pure science, then we have abandoned the road to true medical science.” (James Henderson, Death came in a White Robe, 2018, p.24-25)