I concur that we need to draw from many disciplines to understand many issues. I disagree that science is the end all and be all in every situation.
If I want to understand the nature of love, freedom, and morals, I do not look to math or physics for the definitive answer. If I want to understand the nature, character, attributes, and ways of the Living God, I do not look to biology for the conclusive answer.
I believe the issues surrounding God's eternity, time, relations, etc. require logic and reasoning, but they ultimately require revelation of truth from Himself. Once it is established that the Word of God is an accurate, authoritative revelation of God, then we need theologians, textual criticism, hermeneutics, original language studies, etc. to accurately understand the revelation. The Holy Spirit ultimately illuminates truth to our minds and spirits. The physicist is not the one to look to for discerning spiritual truth, unless he has mastered Hebrew, Greek, manuscript evidence, etc.
Perhaps the issue is whether science or spiritual leaders are the gate keepers for spiritual knowledge. Science studies God's creation and His handiwork. We can know somethings about God from this (Rom. 1). Theology studies God. We cannot know who Jesus is and how God is triune from raw science.
Theology, philosophy, science, etc. do not have to be in conflict, but we have to recognize the limitations/applications of each. Origins (evolution vs creationism) requires biblical and geological understanding. This is an example of a theory being elevated to fact while ignoring an alternate understanding of cosmology, fossil record, etc.