It is hard to imagine improving on Aristotle without resorting to methods that were simply unavailable to him.
Just wanted to remind everyone that this is straight-up false. Aristotle assumed a lot of wrong things to prove also-wrong things. For example, Aristotle proved lots of stuff based on the infallibility of sensation, but since that's a false premise, all that stuff was pointless. It's not at all impossible to surpass historical figures, because not just believing what you like is fairly rare and gets rarer the further back in scientific progress you go.
The infallibility of the senses sounds more like Rand.
Gregory Wheeler has written an eloquent new defense of formal philosophy.
Quotes:
See also: An Overview of Formal Epistemology.