Science is not the Enemy of the Humanities | New Republic:
The second ideal is that the acquisition of knowledge is hard.  The world does not go out of its way to reveal its workings, and even  if it did, our minds are prone to illusions, fallacies, and super-  stitions. Most of the traditional causes of belief—faith, revelation,  dogma, authority, charisma, conventional wisdom, the invigorating glow  of subjective certainty—are generators of error and should be dismissed  as sources of knowledge. To understand the world, we must cultivate  work-arounds for our cognitive limitations, including skepticism, open  debate, formal precision, and empirical tests, often requiring feats of  ingenuity. Any movement that calls itself “scientific” but fails to  nurture opportunities for the falsification of its own beliefs (most  obviously when it murders or imprisons the people who disagree with it)  is not a scientific movement.