I do not doubt that there are people who have religious faith. That is what all those more than one million prove: That there are faithful people.
Ah, fair enough.
While I do believe what I choose to believe, as I progress through college and take science classes, I have at times had serious doubts as to the existence of the Christian God, but due to a number of what appear like more than coincidences to me, I have come to believe that there is a higher power, and due to a lack of a more comprehensive spiritual education, I choose to believe in that which I have become most familiar with. While Christians for the most part are dubious of people who call themselves atheist or agnostic, I can appreciate this honesty and courage. I can see the arrogance of a person who says 'I know' there is a God, even though he's never seen one. There is also arrogance in someone who says 'There is no God'.
If a person says 'I don't know if there is a God', I can find that to be understandable, this at least shows that that person is willing to admit that it is beyond him.
I do believe in ghosts although I do not try to coerce others into believing in ghosts or psychic residue(in this I mean that emotions and human thought are a form of energy which no matter how nominal; they do exist. I don't find it completely implausible that when a person sees a ghost they are merely witnessing the residual effects of an intense emotional reaction that occurred in a place), however you view it, I don't think it is without its merits. You may say, 'but science has not found any evidence of these things'. Perhaps there is no scientific way to detect the spirit or anything not within the realm of science.
All matters of faith because there can be no testable evidence for them.
Just as the human body only has five senses available to it, the science community as a whole and throughout time constitutes a body of knowledge, information, and evidence that can only be detected with this scientific bodies' "five senses" so to speak. As I'm sure you are aware there are many things that the human bodies five senses cannot detect as well as many things in which our senses do detect giving us evidence of our surrounding. This may seem like an odious comparison, but are not scientists, science, and all things science an extension of man's curiousity which in itself is an aspect of humanity and its five senses. Science is also limited in its understanding of the universe, and so to put your entire confidence in something that is so tenuous and questionable shows a lot of faith in humankind.
(A little fascinating factoid: Readers may already know this from the movie with the title that relates to the fact that when a person dies, they weigh 21 grams less than they did when they were alive. Some would say that this is the soul leaving the body. I'm not sure what the scientific explanation for this is. I would like to know.)
While I do not find it appropriate to attack or try to coerce someone into seeing things the way I do, I will defend my beliefs when I feel they are being misrepresented and explain why I believe what I do as it pertains to the circumstances. Of course, in order for me to truly convince you, then you would need faith.