Native wrote: "mathematical truths which simply can’t be proven."
They can't be assumed to be truths if they can't be proven.
Even a liar could tell a truth. It is possible to tell a truth without knowing that it is true and without proving it.
It is also possible to say something that is sometimes true.
Star Trek did an episode about befuddling a computer by saying "everything I say is a lie." The computer mind got stuck in an infinite loop "but if you are lying, then everything you say is true, and if everything you say is true, then you are true about lying." It didn't realize that people can sometimes lie and sometimes tell the truth.
Almost all math problems require proven truths. Fermat's unproven theorem was one that was recently proven. Yet, there were physicists who used that in some of their research. But, until that theorem was proven, their research was flawed.
Sometimes scientists use their imaginations to fill in unknown or unknowable information. For example, since a black hole has sufficient gravity to crush matter to a singularity, they assume that it is possible. (A singularity has zero width, zero depth, and zero height.....no dimension at all). In a singularity, all laws of physics break down (how can you calculate velocity, which is distance divided by time, if distance doesn't exist?). Since there is no way to know what is happening inside a black hole, we can't tell how it is structured. However, I reject the notion of a singularity, because physical laws break down. In the past month, someone submitted a new theory (based on calculations) that show that the interior of a black hole is a hollow sphere (I think this is right).
Another example of scientists using imagination to fill in unknown knowledge: The expansion of the universe is expanding, and Friedman's Equation seems to indicate that dark matter "might" be responsible. But, that dark matter would have to have repulsive gravity, and no one has ever observed repulsive gravity. CERN, this year, did a study of the gravity of antimatter. Since releasing antimatter in a matter world would quickly result in annihilation, they had to constrain the antimatter in a magnetic field, then release it to see what effect gravity would have on it. They had hoped that antimatter might have anti-gravity, but, found, instead, that it had regular gravity (results not quite confirmed).
Theists fill in gaps of knowledge with faith. Scientists are not supposed to fill in gaps of knowledge until they know things.
Science never proves anything (it isn't supposed to). Rather, scientists, with rigorous experiments, propose theories to try to explain phenomena. These aren't wild guesses, but theories based on experiments. Facts are few and far between in science, but theories are common.
So, when scientists make leaps of faith, to assume that singularities are inside black holes, and dark matter causes acceleration of the expansion of the universe, science behaves like a religion, rather than traditional science.