One way of putting it is to say science is the practice and findings of scientific method. Scientific method is a branch of reasoned skeptical enquiry, and (to oversimplify) is reasoning honestly and transparently from examinable evidence with the intention to explore, describe and explain the entities and phenomena of nature. It includes such ideas as hypothesis formation, hypothesis testing by experiment, peer review and publication, common unambiguous terminology, debate, re-testing, aiming to address and amend problems, errors and difficulties, and so on. And of course luck good or bad, sudden insights, flashes of inspiration and cries of Aha! and of Dang! come with the territory.How would you define science?
I'll let >Wikipedia< field that one. I'll add that many of the major ideas have big debts to the ancient Greeks. (As does the Christian church, for that matter.)Briefly, what is the history of science?
Scientific method has no peer, no serious rival at all, for addressing the question, what's true in reality?What is the strengths and weaknesses of science?
Free of human folly, malice, and negligence, it does what it tries to do without particular weaknesses; and since it's constantly self-examining and self-correcting, always a work in progress, if it finds a weakness in method, it seeks to correct it.