The sad part is that Science is just as full of Believers as Religion.
I don't necessarily find that sad. First of all, "science" is generally so incredibly specialized that most people practicing it can have faith without it affecting their work. For example, someone studying the mitochondria of cells could certainly believe that a higher power set off the Big Bang without her results being tainted by a religious bias. I remember reading an excellent article in
Skeptic magazine where scientists who were religious explained similar positions about how their science and their faith coexisted.
Granted, none of the ones profiled were fundamentalists, or evangelicals, or born again, etc. I would say that science and the extremes of religion are not compatible, but generally speaking, religious belief does not
automatically exclude the power of critical thinking in secular pursuits.