Wrong, it answers "why" as well. Some time ago, your parents had sex (I suppose they didn't have to use artificial insemination). As a result, your father's sperm fertlized your mother's egg. 9 months later, you were born.
See - it answers "why" pretty well.
Well, I think that the widespread modern conception that it's either science OR religion is idiotic. The scientific method does inform us on what we can hold for certain and what we can't. But science does not deal with issues like the meaning of life, which is what I believe religion is trying to show.
In other words, I don't like the science's explanation because it implies your existence is just a coincidence and there is no greater, divine purpose of your existence. Ergo, there must be a God which cares for you and your immortal soul which will go to heaven after you die (if you follow the rules written in some holy book, some of them anyway).
Dawkins adressed this too. Human brains are programmed to assign meaning to natural processes.
"Why the lightning struck the tree in front of me? God is telling me something!" It's a survival strategy which evolved in other animals too.
My rational mind screams: what the hell is this?! If you do all that, then you're deluding yourself. You're looking for something better, because you don't like the hard reality.
So many people don't seem to get that religion and science deal with different sorts of questions, including, evidently, you.
Wrong again. Religion has always tried to explain everything. Recently, science has begun to compete with it and eventually it outcompeted it, so most religion moved to less tangible things - essentially what you just told me "why are we here, what are we supposed to do with our lives" etc. etc.
But it's all just an illusion. Religion is not something uncomparable with science and rational inquiry, it's an ALTERNATIVE to it. You can't have both - either you believe that God created humans from dust, or you believe the scientific explanation. Either you believe in reincarnation, or you stick with science which found to evidence for this assertion whatsoever. Either you believe that there is a place called Hell where a loving God tortures and mutilates souls of his children, or you're a rational person and ask
"where is this Hell? What is this soul? Can we measure it, can we observe it? Is there any evidence whatsoever that these things exist?"
Dawkins' greatest contribution to the debate was that he made it crystal clear that religion and science are incompatible.
While there may be overlaps, where I would favour science, there's just no way to say that science would replace religion. Maybe religion would die off on its own as it proves inadequate for its task in future contexts. But science would quite certainly not fill the gap.
So you admit that religion is a product of human emotional needs? Humans feel bad about this world, they're scared of death which means the end of their existence, so they invent a delusion of afterlife and god who cares about them and listens to them?
Because that's a pretty rational explanation for faith. We all believe in some things without much evidence, because we want to. We're simply not entirely rational animals.
For example, I believe the girl I met yesterday was pretty interested in me. On the other hand, there is a voice in the back of my head saying
"No, you're just imagining it because you liked her and want it to be true."
I think it's the same with religion, unfortunately a lot of people prefer to silence that pesky voice of reason in favour of pleasant delusion of God.