Perhaps, and the rebuttal is only more of the same. The other side of the coin. Science was born from theism. All cultures are predicated upon mythological presuppositions. Some supernatural and some secular. The unnecessary contentions between the religious ideologue and scientism only serve to display the similarities in their poorly constructed argument. It's pointless from the start.
The history of natural science was born from the Archaic period of Greek Natural Philosophy, where philosophers like Thales, tried to untangle observations of nature from religious beliefs, from superstitions, from religious traditions and myths.
Of course, it never completely break off ties between religion and science, as shown in the relationships between astronomy and astrology, and astrology continued to plague and hinder advances of astronomy right up to the 19th century.
Everything that we looked at in the past, is really Natural Philosophy.
Natural Sciences only truly began in the 19th century, when it was broken down into the following sciences:
- physics
- chemistry
- Earth science
- astronomy
- Life Sciences (which included everything biology related)
Religion still trying interfere with sciences in the 19th century, as it was shown after the publication of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species in 1859, followed by the debate at Oxford, between Samuel Wilberforce (bishop of Oxford) and Thomas Henry Huxley, in 1860.
In the previous century, it was time of Age of Enlightenment, where philosophers of the time, encouraged the head of states in Europe, to separate religion from state, particularly in regards to politics and laws. Secularism was not about ridding religion, but about stopping religions (the churches) in this case, from interfering with political policies and to provide equal status between believers and non-believers in the eye of the law.
This secular divide, didn’t happen in the 18th century with education of public schools and universities. In the 19th century, creation was still taught in science classes.
It was Huxley himself, who changed the policies of universities and public schools throughout Great Britain, to separate science classes and lectures from theology and other religious studies, including removing creation from science.
This of course, wouldn’t stop creation being taught with science, in schools and colleges owned and run by the Church of England or Catholic Church.
The main problem with religion being taught in science classes, is that God and angels are not something you can observe and test.
The only reasons that sciences have so many discoveries from the 19th century to the present, it was no longer dictated by religious beliefs.
sure, I am not denying the contributions of religious people to science and mathematics, philosophers from Christians, Jews and Muslims, but that have to do with the individuals’ insight, enquiring minds and their hard works, and not to scriptures (eg Bible, Tanakh & Qur’an) and nothing to do with religious teachings or religious traditions.
Yes, Leonardo de Vinci and Michelangelo were great geniuses, but neither the Bible, nor Church teachings, taught any of these geniuses how to paint or sculpt, nor how de Vinci to invent.
neither the church, nor the Bible, taught Isaac Newton about the laws of motion or about gravity, or about calculus.
James Clerk Maxwell was indeed a very deeply religious Scotsman, but the Bible didn’t in any ways teach him about the physics of electromagnetic fields.
you are giving religions far too much credits for something they haven’t done.
it wasn’t religions that taught people how to hunt, fish or farm. And though Genesis credited Noah with growing grapes in vineyard and making wine, that’s also not true, as there are evidence (eg wine press, fermentation vat) in cave near Aremenian village of Arni. Those evidence have been dated to 4100 BCE.
Adam and Cain being the earliest farmers, Abel being shepherd, and Noah being the first winemaker, are all works of fiction.