I meant to suggest that any philosophy which could never conflict with science is immediately suspicious unless you mean something relatively narrow by 'science' (for example, by excluding psychology). If you claim that something could never be disproven by science, that's pretty close to saying 'it won't ever affect your decisions', in which case, why care?
I think of philosophy as more like trying to fix the software that your brain runs on. Which includes, for example, how you categorize the outside world, and also your own model of yourself. That sounds like it ought to be the stamping ground of cognitive science, but we actually have a nice, high-level access to this kind of thing that doesn't involve thinking about neurons at all: language. So we can work at that level, instead (or as well).
A lot of the stuff in the Sequences, for example, falls under this: it's an investigation into what the hell is goi...
Thagard (2012) contains a nicely compact passage on thought experiments: