For like Whitehead and Dewey, Kadushin understood that the concept of organic thinking offered an approach to logic and the foundations of knowledge that was an alternative to the perversions of
the sort of blind faith in natural science that had come to dominate the intellectual cultures of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; an alternative that did not attempt to devalue science or replace it with a nonrational mysticism, but which did attempt to place scientific thought into a broader cultural context in which other forms of cultural expression such as religious and legal reasoning could play important and non-subservient roles.
Lastly, the idea that all «religious» people, by which I assume you mean people who believe there is a God, go to church, that
sort of thing, think only with a certain mindset, that is, a non scientific mindset, believing or disbelieving based entirely on
blind faith, and never facts, is shown wrong by people like G K Chesterton and especially C S Lewis.