That is certainly true. But science does not matter to all people in all circumstances.
Of course not. An often mentioned example of this is "why do I find this song beautiful?" Science can't answer that question, at least at the moment. However, when you are making claims about a deity or deities affecting our lives, you are making a claim that can be tested by the scientific method.
Sorry for the confusion, it is properly spelled "holism." Holism is the counterpart to reductionism. It is the view that takes things as a whole, with no objective basis for a reduction into constituent parts. We get into trouble when we apply reductionism to what is not reducible, either because it is inherently irreducible or because we lack sufficient knowledge of the constituent parts.
OK. What are those irreducible parts? The elementary particles (quarks, gluons, electrons, and so on)? What part of a human is irreducible in your opinion?
Literature is one category that reductionism does not work well on and romanticism is a literary response to the over reaching of reductionism.
Now we are talking about value judgements. One might claim that a collection letters in a certain order brings forth the emergent property of beauty in the text, but you'll probably also find people who don't find the produced text beautiful.
We divide literature in a way that makes sense to us, not because the division approximates something in nature.
Sure. That's because value judgements in this sense have little to with more fundamental things like survival or basic particle interactions. You need an intelligence capable of making those evaluations in the first place, and the results of the evaluations may well be the result of more fundamental properties of the intelligence.
The conception that God, envisioned as an all powerful supernatural entity, can be reduced by looking at essentially arbitrary chapters and verses of the Bible has always appeared to me as the height of arrogance.
You lost me here. Should we not judge the God of the Bible by his actions depicted in the book?
One poor use of reductionism that scientist are prone to use is extending into areas where the knowledge of nature is far to incomplete for a meaningful division to me made. I have read critiques of Dawkins books from fellow atheist evolutionary biologist that make this claim.
This sounds like hand-waving. Dawkins is surely and correctly critiqued on a scientific basis for some of the scientific hypotheses he is putting forth in his books, but I've yet to see a proper rebuttal of his religious claims,
i.e. the lack of evidence and the problem of the cornucopia of different religions.
The technique is useful in developing hypothesis, but Dawkins appears to some, to extend his claims regarding religion from hypothetical in a scientific theory without sufficient evidence. That is what, in my opinion, make him appear arrogant.
Have you actually read for example
God Delusion? He acknowledges the possibility of a god or gods, that's why he puts himself to a grade of 6.9 out of 7 on the disbelief scale, meaning that he's pretty sure at the moment that there is no higher power, but still doesn't outright deny the supernatural. That's the scientific stand: There is no evidence at the moment, so we discard the hypothesis, but reserve the right to revisit it if any evidence emerges at a later point.
I think we should embrace holism, for what it is, and be adamant in pointing out the overreaching of reductionism when it occurs.
Again, what is this "holism" of a human? Are we not a collection cells? Do our brains not work by the combination of electric and chemical interactions, governed by the laws of physics? What is the holism we should embrace?