Science has replaced traditional religions as the underpinning of society, and in the same manner, the general public doesn't really understand it anymore than they did the gods of old. Science is this mysterious giver of all things. Heck, I recall interviews with kids and even some adults where scientists are credited with making the sky blue and plants green. Blind faith without any true comprehension is the order of the day when it comes to Western worship of science. I mean, consider that the education systems and ratings of said cultures is so woefully low while they still profess to promote science and technology and you see my point.
Agree, at least to some extent. I think there are some who have a vested interest in perpetuating the idea that science and technology are best left to the experts. Microsoft, for example, would be happy if the rest of us had no idea how their software works.
But I'm not sure that "worship" is really the right word. To me that implies a kind of deference and respect that really isn't there. Think about the negative stereotypes like "geeks" and "pointy-headed intellectuals" that get attached to people who do science. Science IMO is less like a deity and more like the genie that you go to to fulfull your wishes and are happy to leave bottled up the rest of the time. That's a different attitude from Krypton, which put scientists on a pedestal -- and in charge of the planet's government. (Are there any scientists in Congress today? I can't think of any.)
Amongst scientists themselves, they've been given to irrational blind faith in defiance of the actual evidence. Take a look at how long it took the mainstream to finally acknowledge the universe is not a closed model despite the glaring evidence or rather lack of it for that closed model (very likely due to a deep, underlying faith that to suggest otherwise invites the real possibility of God; a kind of reverse prejudice). Abiogenesis is still considered an established fact despite the actual paucity of facts to support it.
Having met and worked with a fair number of scientists, this really doesn't match my impressions. (And I'm talking about ones who do things like cosmology and grand unified field theories, because that is the kind that I studied under.) Many scientists, maybe the majority in the US, are Christians themselves, simply because that is the majority of the country as a whole. Just about all of those scientists regard religion as seperate from things like cosmology -- that which must be taken on faith versus that which can be deduced from observation and experiment. Few if any actively oppose religion, though many do vocally oppose certain varieties such as Jerry Falwell-style fundamentalism.
I certainly don't see anybody's philosophical beliefs prejudicing them for or against a closed universe -- which I think was regarded as an open question when I was in grad school. The problem was coming up with a self-consistent theory, whether closed or not closed, that explains the observed universe. Not that there aren't prejudices among scientists. A lot of them are strongly biased in favor of their own pet theories. This is understandable; if you're an expert on Superstring Theory, you have a vested interest in seeing it accepted as the established theory of everything.
As for abiogenesis, biology isn't my thing, so I'll just offer
this link.