I noted multiple exceptions when it doesn't improve it.
It sounded to me like you were criticizing doctors for not being scientific. Is your thesis that it's alright that doctors aren't?
If you want specific examples of what I'm referring to in regards to scientists screwing up, read Andrew Gelman's or James Coyne's blogs.
So on the one hand you advocate scientific thinking and then you come and provide anecdotal evidence? Decision science is a field.
This is just vague.
Why is the question of whether a particular form of reasoning follows the standards of "Thinking like a Scientist" vague? If you would have clear standards of what "Thinking like a Scientist" means, I think you should be able to answer the question.
If you don't have clear standards, then you are right it's vague. That means there a problem. Being to vague to be wrong is bad. The paradigm of science would say that removing vagueness from your theory would improve it.
"What do you actually mean when you say 'Thinking like a Scientist'" is to me the better response than 'Yeah science".
I do not claim that in-depth scientific analysis is always necessary. I claim that heuristics are often the rational approach, and gave examples in which I stated they were rational. I do not claim that all or even most scientists screw up their analysis. I do not claim how frequently it occurs. I do claim that I see it often enough that it worries me. I do claim that among non-scientists, the problem is much more common. I do not claim that personal experiences are useless. I claim that statistical analysis is superior and that people will often not note this in their personal assessment. I claim that I see these problems often enough that I can determine heuristically that it is likely to be extremely common.