Metropolis Organism, blog post #23, The Faith of the Rational mind The Faith of the Rational Mind Even science requires belief — just of a different kind. Opening We moderns like to think of ourselves as enlightened. We put our trust in science, not scripture. We believe in facts, not faith. Yet that very confidence in science may itself be a kind of faith — one that hides behind reason, dressed in the language of logic and evidence. 1. The Comfortable Divide It’s comforting to draw a clean line between religion and science. Religion, we say, is about belief in things unseen — heaven, souls, miracles. Science, in contrast, is about things that can be tested, measured, and proven. But the truth is messier. Science is not a fixed set of facts; it’s a process — a way of asking questions, forming models, and updating our understanding based on evidence. That process is reliable, yes, but it is also trusted . And trust, even in its most rational form, is another word for faith. 2....