Hey Dicky,
This seems especially true when considering the approach of Christian fundamentalists and biblical inerrantists. You know the drill:"the writers of the Bible knew the earth was a sphere before anyone else" etc (needless to say the Bible does not refer to the earth as a sphere).
However, there certainly seem to be limits with the fundie approach, hence the endless arguments to try and prove "by science" that evolution is not true and that Adam and Eve really existed. Whether any of this merry band have tried to enlist the investigations into 'Mitochondrial Eve' into their armoury, I don't know. They would have a bit of a problem pairing her off exactly with 'Y-chromosome Adam', though.
Pretty much, yes. The approach seems to be twofold.
First: “Science has found out some pretty amazing stuff – religion claims some pretty amazing stuff too, therefore their “amazing stuff-ness” are equivalent.” There’s no attempt to justify the claims religions actually make, just an unspoken “virtue by association” attempt.
Second: “Here’s something a religious text says – if I ignore the other stuff it says that’s plainly wrong (ie, the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy), then twist and jemmy it hard enough then voilà – quantum physics! (or whatever)”
It’s fodder for the non-reasoning perhaps, albeit with quite high production values – presumably funded by the “Word on Fire Institute” evangelical outfit behind it.