That's circular reasoning. You could just as well define pseudoscience as anything you disagree with.
It is not circular reasoning but rather you setting up a strawman fallacy.
There are many things I disagree with such as Bohmian mechanics but I don’t automatically define them as being pseudoscience.
Here we go again for
umpteenth time.
Hopefully an illustration with science as a comparison will give you a better understanding of what pseudoscience is about.
One doesn’t have to go past the first and most important criterion on the list.
Science demands evidence where the evidence in this case leads to the conclusion for the great flood; no such evidence exists.
“Catastrophic plate tectonics hypothesis” assumes a global flood without evidence, where the conclusion becomes the premise and the hypothesis is developed to confirm the conclusion.
This is how a circular reasoning works which is characteristic of pseudoscience.
Yet by his own words the inspiration of his hypothesis came to him in a daydream. Giving that a pass while labeling the catastrophic tectonic plate hypothesis a pseudoscience due to its origin is a double standard. What separates the two is not the inspiration, but the final results.
And here you have gone from making a strawman fallacy to one of false equivocation.
Do I need to explain again that while Kekule’s dream is a nice story the observation or more precisely the data from experimentation provided the impetus for Kekule to find an explanation for the low reactivity of benzene.
“Catastrophic plate tectonics” is not based on observations but illogical circular reasoning.
Sigh. That is precisely why I used that as an example. It's a refutation for the catastrophic tectonic plate hypothesis. The first time I heard of catastrophic tectonic plate hypothesis, the sea mount and island chain as the Pacific Plate passed over the Hawaiian hot spot came to mind almost immediately (if anyone wants to see why, go to Google Earth, rotate the globe to the Pacific, and note the sea mount and island chain that stretches from Asia to Hawaii).
Now, the catastrophic tectonic plate hypothesis doesn't hold up. That in itself doesn't make it a pseudoscience. What makes it a pseudoscience is its persistence despite the hypothesis not holding up.
I suggest you take another look at the criteria for pseudoscience.
Your definition falls in the category of “dogmatic and unyielding” which is at the bottom of the list and probably reflects the order of importance given by the author.
Personally I wouldn’t consider this as pseudoscience.
Fred Hoyle one of the founders of Steady State cosmology argued to the day he died his model was superior to the BB model.
This doesn’t make the Steady State model pseudoscience it follows the science criteria in the list but fell out of favour due to the final point “changes with new evidence”.