The bigger problem for religionists and those who defend of faith-based beliefs and/or reject scientifically supported ideas is their hypocrisy and internal inconsistency with which they accept or reject the products of evidence-based reasoning. Faith is the definitional antithesis of evidence-based reasoning. Thus, the plausible accuracy of faith-based beliefs or the inaccuracy of scientifically supported ideas can only be argued for by rejecting the validity of evidence-based reasoning as a basis for increasing the probable accuracy of ideas. To do this is to reject not only all of science, history, and every consensus idea of every intellectual discipline outside of religion, but also to reject all of one's own ideas and those of people around them that result from formal or informal reasoning about the implications of empirically observed events (which is all science really is). Every religionist engages in such reasoning (however flawed) on an almost constant basis, and most of their ideas are the result of this and not of faith. By doing this, they demonstrate implicit acceptance of the superiority of the epistemology of science over that of faith and religion, revealing that any explicit arguments they make to the contrary are just post hoc dishonest rhetoric to allow themselves to violate the principles of reasoned thought that they themselves typically adhere to, but have motivation to violate for particular ideas, especially when the objective accuracy of those ideas is not directly relevant to their well being. The reason that most of the "faithful" abandon faith for evidence-based reasoning when being accurate is a life or death situation is because deep down they know that faith has no validity in discerning the objective truth.