Yes. It goes further than physics, however. Astronomy, Geometry, Physics, many more fields; the foundation of which is all built on a house of cards at a fundamental level.
A "house of cards" that you have demonstrated that you do not understand. You've asserted that the spinning of the Earth would cause a feather at the equator to not fall straight down (wrong, even physics predicts that it'll just fall a bit more slowly). You've asserted some pretty laughable stuff about "perspective." You've demonstrated a lack of understanding of atomic spectra. You don't even understand most of the theory, let alone all of the experiments that were done to validate and derive the theory. Do you think anyone likes special relativity over the simple Galilean motion? Then why is special relativity a thing? It's because of experiments that went against the simple Galilean motion at high speeds.
You don't have nearly enough physics education/knowledge to critique the experiments/theory of physics. I don't, either, but that's why I cite other sources.
This is probably the fifth time I'm suggesting this, but I'll do it again. Tom, download some AP Physics 1 and AP Physics 2 practice questions from the Internet and just try them for yourself like you were actually taking the AP test. You don't have to publish the results, but I want you to realize that your physics knowledge is
extremely misguided. You don't understand simple physics at a fundamental level.
Also, there's no need to quibble on the Wright Brothers' quote; while I'm fairly sure that Tom has misrepresented the provenance of the quote, it doesn't matter. Did Lockheed build the F-22 Raptor by tossing out all of the previous science? Seems expensive to hire those engineers. What about the Minuteman III ICBM? What about any of the jets that you fly on today? Do you realize how many engineers, many of whom studied only conventional science and engineering in university, worked on these things?