I don't consider myself to be a ''religious person'', ippy, though I do have faith. It is not incompatible with neuroscience or neuropsychology and won't stop me doing an online course. I get what you are saying and thank you for it. However you cannot generalise about people with faith, we're all different and there are plenty working in the fields mentioned who have a faith of some kind.
Brownie,
'Faith' of a religious kind or in secular spirituality does not in any way hinder ones knowledge or development in specific fields like psychology, medicine, evolutionary biology, genetics, cosmology or physics in general.
Atheists just like to think that because of their own limitations.
Some atheists have this compartmentalized and Zoom-in mind .... which prevents them from integrating information from different, seemingly disjointed, fields. They therefore tend to think that everyone would be like that.
In fact, serious practice of Yoga, meditations and Pranayama (breathing techniques) can help one to broaden ones mind, remove the compartments and look at the mind objectively from the inside. Such people will make the best psychologists.....and philosopher scientists in general.
Cheers.
Sriram