Yes man survived, and that is about all.
Man survived and built the wonders of the world, they developed things which we have no clue how to replicate today, and they developed those things which science couldn't even begin to exist without (Pythagorean Theorem for example). They developed beautiful art, wrote literature and built things that would be around for thousands of years after themselves, developed highly influential philosophical systems which we still use to this day, developed mathematics, they built huge empires, developed democracy, discovered the New World, etc.
In early history, man learned to build and use chariots. Several thousand years later, while those other fields held sway – those fields you declare that are so vastly more important than science – man progressed from chariots to stage coaches. Then science as a formal discipline came along, and within a century and a half hundreds of people at a time travel across oceans, in comfort 7 miles high at 40 times the speed of your old horse-drawn contrivances. Now because of science every generation generates more new knowledge than the entire previous 4 millennia.
Yes, there has been a drastic increase in knowledge thanks to science and science has made our lives easier in several ways. But the knowledge acquired can't compare to the importance of the knowledge that earlier man possessed and developed, without which modern science couldn't even exist. Just because science has increased our knowledge quite a lot (for how much longer?) it still pales in comparison to the various non-scientific areas of knowledge I have presented to you.
Included in that is how to extend our knowledge of history back far beyond man’s arrival, and curing diseases that ravaged the world for centuries, and producing enough food for multitudes. Unimportant science.
There are educated guesses as to the history of the planet prior to man. They can't actually observe or test the past however, so the past isn't properly within the scientific realm. At best we can try to explain what in the past
might have produced the phenomenon we observe in the present. Though even if 100% science still pales in importance.
Science has cured diseases, it has also invented biological weapons and made old diseases stronger. Science might be able to produce food for everyone, but they still choose to let them starve (demonstrating once again that we need morality and not just science). Further, technology has also introduced new physical problems: greater % obesity of the population than any other population in the world at any previous point in history and physical problems produced through continued use of technology in the work place (carpal tunnel for example).
For all the comforts science can introduce into our lives, science cannot compare to the various non-scientific areas of knowledge I have presented to you. Scientism is the fairy tale.