I'm not sure what the purpose, or point, of posting this is?
I don't think anyone suggested that mimicry is not a valid (and commonplace) way of learning?
I think it was simply maintained that a better understanding would be acquired by a more thorough understanding of the science behind certain practices. Least nonsensical practices become entrenched through simple mimicry. I'm surprised that anyone can (or would try to) sensibly argue otherwise.
To reinforce that concept, here are some simple examples (from
http://stephswiki.wikispaces.com) of where common misunderstandings have led to absurd practices becoming entrenched, even if some of them maybe have a modicum of scientific rationale behind them (though undoubtedly not know at the time). Fortunately, I'm sure you'd agree, our level of understanding has vastly improved, through better scientific understanding, to the benefit of all (including leeches, wolves, pigs, toads, pigs, birds, etc) !:
"COMMON SICKNESSES AND CURES
RINGWORM Wash hair in a males urine.
PLAGUE Eat powdered emeralds, bathing in human urine, wearing of excrement, placing dead animals in home, use of leeches or drinking molten gold.
SKIN DISEASE Cover sore spot with the skin of a wolf.
LOSS OF MEMORY Eat ginger.
INSOMNIA Eat treacle.
BRUISES Apply a plaster of bacon fat & flour.
FAINTING Breathe the smoke of burnt feathers.
BLOCKED NOSE Stuff mustard & onion up the nose
INTERNAL BLEEDING Wear a dried toad in a bag around the neck
GOUT Apply a plaster of goats droppings mixed with rosemary, herbs & honey
KIDNEY STONES Apply a hot plaster smeared with honey and pigeon poo.
TOOTHACHE Get a candle and burn it close to the tooth. The worms that are gnawing the tooth will fall into a cup of water held by the mouth.
"RING A RING A ROSIES"
Every kid has joined hands with friends and sang the familiar nursery rhyme, "Ring around a rosie, a pocket full of posies. A tissue, a tissue, we all fall down." Not many people realize what this happy little nursery rhyme actually means.The nursery rhyme began about 1347 and refers to the deadly Black Plague, which killed over twenty-five million people in the fourteenth century. The "ring around a rosie" refers to the round, red rash that is the first symptom of the disease. "A pocket full of posies." means carrying flowers and placing them around the infected person for protection. "A tissue" means the sneezing sounds made by the infected person and finally, "we all fall down" describes the many dead from the disease.
DID THEY THINK THEY WORKED?
In medieval times, people didnt know better than to believe that these cures worked. There was no source of medicine so really they had to just try lots of different things. When they thought something worked, somebody else with the same disease/sickness would try it but they would usually end up dead because it didnt (my emphasis)".Sound (analogously) familiar?

The recent derogatory and frequent references to "Monkey sees, monkey does"...
I suppose we really should apologise, to monkeys everywhere, for our derogatory comments
