I legitimately don't understand. The structure of benzine already existed, therefor it cannot be said to be new.
It's knowledge that
nobody had before, therefore it's new. Come on, put
some effort into thinking this through -
knowledge is is by definition information that
people have, I at no point made
any implication that the structure of benzene didn't exist.
Seriously, if you're arguing that "new knowledge" isn't a real thing, you're just having problems with terminology, and your objections are irrelevant to any point at hand.
The point is that the claim is self-defeating.
No it isn't, the predictive power of knowledge has no relation to the validity of an argument.
Let's recap:
The entire point of knowing anything (excepting stuff that's fun to know) is for the predictive ability.
What predicative ability does knowing the entire point of knowing things offer?
None at first glance, lots of meta-knowledge about humans is essentially worthless.
I don't get what your point in asking me the predictive qualities of various pieces of knowledge is?
The point is that the claim is self-defeating.
I thought we were discussing the value of history vis a vis Science, not the value of history vis a vis Philosophy.
I don't really understand what you're discussing, you mostly seem to be getting worked up over perceived slights to history as a subject.
Well, what is it?
Anthropology that was already known at some point (ie. history falls in this category) is pretty obviously not new knowledge.
A fact that was never known, and which remain true irrespective of the existence of humanity is pretty obviously new knowledge.
Other things (anthropology which wasn't known in the past, and rediscovered non-anthropological knowledge falls somewhere in-between)
Returning to topic, however, in essence all science is 'useless'
This is pretty obviously not the case with any commonly accepted definition of "usefulness".