First let me say that no matter how many people you chose to do the experiments they are never identical.
This is why science is such a powerful tool! You don't
want the experiments to be identical. If they were, and the first experimenter made some mistake, then the next one would just be repeating the same mistake, and we would learn nothing! No, the reason why independent verification is valuable is precisely because different people do the science differently. And the more differently they do it the better! It is only by tackling various problems from as many different angles as possible that we can really become confident of our underlying explanations (theories).
However, science is not in question. Science works and although presuppositions and assumptions can be used to twist findings and conclusions just as with any human endeavor, science is not the issue. What lies behind, under, thru science that is the issue. I don't know how I can make this clearer to you.
Well, it's clear as mud right now. Because you have simply asserted, without any reasoning whatsoever, that somehow the uniformity of nature implies something supernatural.
This is good in theory, but how ofter do you think that research papers are given out to just anyone? Do you really think that if you are in doubt of some finding that you can just walk up to the scientist and ask for his research documentation? Not hardly. How many times have you researched on your own a significant finding in the science realm?
Um, all the time. It varies somewhat between the various fields, but completely open research papers have been available for some time. Within physics and mathematics, for example, arxiv.org has become the standard place to put papers when they are first sent to a journal for publication, meaning that nearly every physics or mathematics publication released in the last ten years or so is freely available. It is also standard practice, at least among physicists, to send anybody who asks a copy of their scientific papers.
For some other sciences, you need to be situated at a university to read many papers. But open access is becoming more and more common nonetheless.
If you want some of the underlying work, well, two things about that:
1. A well-written scientific paper will be written so that anybody can, in principle, replicate what they have done.
2. If you are congenial and not obviously nuts, most researchers will freely provide you with any part of the research that can't be replicated.
I said, you cannot find anything verifiable without the supernatural. I don't know how I can make this clearer. You have to assume, a meta-physical activity, to begin to do science or validate evidence.
Wait, wait, wait. You're saying that the
assumption itself is supernatural? That's crazy! Within science, any and all assumptions are only provisional assumptions anyway: we make them in order to get stuff done, and gladly throw them out if they fail to work.