Thank you very much. I'm not a philosophy major or anything like that. I'm a stubborn guy who thinks he can acquire all knowledge if he tries hard.
What I do is a secret (I'm sorry), but it has nothing to do with most of what I talk about on this forum. Here, I am merely a person with broad interests.
I came across Karl Popper because I wanted to grasp this idea of falsification. I had an intuition that this idea that he invented falsification seemed too far-fetched, given that most human thought is exercised in various ways every day. Induction, deduction, abduction, etc. But we usually don't pay much attention to the discerning underlying systems of these everyday natural mental tools for problem-solving (things we have known implicitly since ancient times). I sometimes do this. It can start from an intuitive suspicion that something is iffy, with given that I am stubborn, I often delve into something because I have an issue with it. Which forces me to learn about it through a very critical lens. So yes, I went into Popperianism because I had issues to settle.
It turns out, I was correct. The medical world had used a similar system to do their profession long before Karl Popper -- popped up, and improved the scientific method. It initially started with me also having an issue with how the scientific field oftentimes takes monopoly of the formation of the method itself, by always taking a modernist western-centric view of science history, not including its origin among Islamic scholars.
I know what you are thinking but I am not the contrarian type. I promise, lol.