Quote from Thunderdog:
To answer the question that is the title of this thread, I think that, apart from those things that science has uncovered that had previously been shrouded in religious mysticism, science and religious faith are fairly independent of one another. Science is the quest for knowledge, pure and simple. Faith, as I see it, is a quest for solace and comfort. Allow me to explain. If I felt that I needed more friends in my life to feel more happy and "complete," then I would look to fill that gap by making more friends. And if I felt that a single mortal life, or life's random (and not so random) injustices from time to time left me wanting, then I might look to fill that gap with faith of something more, something bigger. In that respect, science and religious faith have nothing to do with one another.
Some may disagree, but that is my honest opinion.
Faith might provide solace and comfort, but that does not make it real.
It is difficult to exaggerate the capacity of people to delude themselves.
To some, faith means praying to a personal God who cares, listens, and acts within the world.
The evidence for a personal God who answers prayers by acting within the world would be demonstrable.
If science does not make God obsolete, there should be evidence that God suspends the laws that govern the universe by, for instance, making the dead come back to life, and performing other "miracles."
Yet there is no evidence, so far, that such a personal God exists.
A person might have faith that God will heal his severed leg by helping him grow a new one, but all the faith in the world will do no good.
The delusion, though, might provide comfort.
In this heartless, ruthless world, a little comfort, even if it comes from delusion, actually might do some good. Placebos sometimes do "work".