Your claiming that there exists some simpler physical theory that could be derived from philosophy.
You should be able to back up your claim by showing some example (not fully worked out, just some idea) of a philosophy-inspired physical theory that is simpler than current theories but more or less as precise in its measurable predictions of what will happen next in sine physical system.
I guess the intended meaning was that you chose your request ("apply what you say to a problem") based on certain philosophical criteria. I think that's actually a surprisingly valid point, given the original (downvoted) comment.
Which is a philosophical criterion. Just 1000 years ago people would have found such a call for "science" strange and deeply insulting to their authority, which they would have needed to dare speculate about things such as math or physics. Most theories were made from "first principles" while things that were established by evidence (tried it a few times, it always worked, let's keep doing it) were mostly not considered science.
I have no idea what you are talking about and I don't think you do either. The person above thought that physics would be simpler if people used 'philosophy' (whatever that means).
Apart from that, I hope upon some reflection you realize that your sentence is an illustration of my point.