@kellyjay said
James Tour is a Christian, but the science pieces of his presentation didn't address that, had you watched it you would have known. The design we see in life only points to a designer, the specific designer it does not address.
It doesn't matter though, does it, which particular faith in the supernatural any given 'scientist' has, since this is arbitrary in any case. The fact of their believing in the supernatural at all takes that which they say outside the sphere of science. As has been pointed out to you many times in this forum, you only see 'design' in anything if you are trying to crowbar your religious beliefs into the world around you.
Anyway this will be my last post here for a while, I'm leaving Indonesian waters tomorrow for Vietnam for a couple of weeks, so other things will take precedence. I think the Vietnamese are mostly Buddhist, but are quite tolerant in the religious sense. Wherever I travel in the world I see manifestations of humankind's hope and desire for something bigger and better than and beyond this world, which is understandable, and often beautiful, and a little more tolerance of and respect for the beliefs of others would be no bad thing in my opinion.
Religion searches for meaning, science searches for cold, calculated facts, and is a different manifestation of our need and desire to understand the world around us. Religion asks 'why', science asks 'how', and these are two very different questions, and the two should leave each other very much alone. You believe in your god, others believe in their gods, science believes in nothing; faith and science, they are not the same thing, and any scientist should know and understand this.