Yes. Well stated.
I'm suggesting that while this is not doomed to failure the process can be greatly speeded by cutting to the chase. It could take centuries for new paradigms to live and die only to be replaced by another that will do the same. I'm suggesting that every paradigm is doomed to failure but through understanding consciousness we should be able to at least select paradigms with the most predictive capabilities. We can avoid paradigms that arise through bad interpretation of experiment.
This is a complex process but not so complex that we can't deduce it and I'm sure the place to start is to learn to factor out consciousness. This is not so difficult as it might sound since all we really need is a working definition to begin studying it.
Modern metaphysics from the standpoint of definitions and axioms is simple enough but there is also no reason we can't use another kind of science based on logic with a highly complex metaphysics to run in tandem with it.
I am highly concerned about the fact science (cosmology) is bogged down and most people today don't understand the nature of science. One or the other of these is not a serious issue but together they make despots almost inevitable. There is or will be a "correct way to think" based on Look and See Science and deviation will be suppressed. Look around and you can see the early stages today. Science is sold to the highest bidder and the highest bidder already owns government. The teaching of metaphysics and critical thinking would stop this cold.
IMO
I think I am beginning to understand what you are trying to say. The role money or funding plays in science certainly affects how science is conducted. However, I think you over-emphasize it. But the institution of science (if you will allow me to throw everything we consider scientific under the same umbrella) understands the myriad of problems involved in human beings trying to tease out the working of the cosmos and all that is in it, with money/funding being one of many.
What you seem to fail to appreciate, and it requires patience, is that bad science will out over time. In the long run, we keep chipping away at the unknown and growing our fundament understanding of the world and ourselves. The fact that progress in science seems to be two steps forward and one step back is just the reality of we fallible human beings being involved in the process. We cannot take the human being out of the equation to solve the problems we create, we just have to rely on the self-correcting nature of the scientific process, regardless of how messy and inefficient, for without scientific principles and standards, we would get nowhere. The historical record is clear on that score.
I would also suggest that your hope for a "new science" based on metaphysics (however you may define that) and logic is a quixotic one. In fact, your definition of a "new science" is simply the description of the archaic classic philosophy that science has replaced. To adopt such a scheme would stagnate progress in science.
As for consciousness, I am not clear as what you imagine it to be, or mean, but I do not think you will find a magic bullet there that will greatly change the way science is conducted.
The last point I want to address is your apparent frustration with cosmology being "bogged down". The fact that we have cosmological problems that are hard to solve is not an inditement of science, it simply speaks to the difficulty of the problems that are being addressed. Again, patience is required. There is no non-scientific shortcuts to solving these difficult problems.