As long as you treat all scientific facts the same and don't single any out for special mistreatment.
Of course all "scientific facts" should be subjected to vigorous and constant question.
The problem is that when one accepts something as the "final truth," he boxes himself in, in his way of thinking. He can't see things beyond standard textbook definitions.
I recently read something that illustrates this; the diaries of an Englishwoman who was a nurse in the Russian army in 1915.
Most of us have at least a faint idea of conditions in the Russian army at the time; underfed, underarmed, badly officered, notoriously corrupt, and the Austro-Hungarian army constantly shoving them back, back, back (in 1915).
The nurse recorded a rather lengthy description of when the medical personnel, such as it was, was confronted with thousands of bleeding men, thousands of men in pain and agony.
The physicians said, "We can't do anything; we've got no bandages for bleeding, no morphine for pain."
I suppose we would all agree that bandages are best for controlling bleeding, and morphine is best for subduing pain.
But what if one has no bandages, no morphine?
Someone with a rigid narrow-minded way of thinking would then say, "Well, it's very sad, and it's all too bad, but these guys are just going to have lay down and die."
Because they can't possibly conceive of any solution, other than the standard textbook solution.
But as the nurse related in meticulous detail, there appeared at the field-hospital a tall, gaunt Russian Orthodox monk, who went among the wounded, using.....hypnosis.
He of course couldn't restore a missing limb, but his hypnosis appeared to staunch bleeding and alleviate pain. Hypnosis of course wasn't as good as bandages and morphine, but it was something, when the other choice was nothing.
It would never occur to a "scientific" physician that anything short of bandages and morphine would do any good; that there existed alternatives.
It's always healthy to think outside the box, even if one runs the risk of being thought of as iconoclastic.