Quoting groovy from 17:38, 24th Jul 2008
We knew a lot more earlier than most people think we did.
Scientists are saying the future is going to be far more futuristic than they originally predicted.
Sillyness aside, I find this debate rather intriguing. I find it better to orient the arguments as follows:
- Reason vs Religion (i.e. the core claim is not anything really to do with science, but that it is
unreasonable to have faith, this rests on reasonability being a desirable 'good')
- Quantum Mechanics vs General Relativity, the ineptitude of science (it's all in the foundations of the subject, as others have said. Is it a particle explanation, or is it a curvature of some relative structure. Money of mine is on to say both)
- You
crucial difference between "I do not believe in god" and "I believe in 'no God'"/"I believe there is no god".
There are some very intricate and rather endearing arguments in all of these. I'm not a skilled enough logician to get into the nitty-gritty of religion vs reason, so I'd step slightly aside.
With the QMvGR discussion, I find it an immensely compelling example of where our understanding of everything is falling at many turns. We hope it'll get back up, but it illustrates quite highly how easily we 'reasonable people' can be attacked for having faith in some very disturbing, very contradictory things.
But then, the devil is in the details. As I mentioned above, QM & GR are incommensurate wherein their foundations disagree. I half expect there to be a revelation some time in the future where we end up with another 'duality'. That is: our explanation and interpretation of QM isn't always what it seems. That where QM says "particles!" and GR says "relative fields!" there'll be an interchangeable description which yields both and neither of these (in a similar manner to WPD).
But that's a hope and certainly not based in reason!
Crucial Differences
With any sort of discussion like this the semantics are important to get right, but once they're agreed upon they lose significance as they, by themselves, cause few to no problems.
Understanding what we mean when we say "Atheists believe in not-god" or "Atheists not-believe in god" and the differing scales of agnosticism, theism and so on is really important when discussing it. Generalising or, worse, making mistakes and pinning the wrong ideas to the wrong category can really undo the progress of any argument.
Also we can get cynical comments too!

[hr]
"There is only ever one truth. Things are always black or white, there's no such thing as a shade of grey. If you think that something is a shade of grey it simply means that you don't fully understand the situation. The truth is narrow and the path of the pursuit of truth is similarly narrow."
Also, some years later:
"here we are arguing about a few uppity troublemakers with a bee in their bonnet and a conspiracy theory."