He's no Richard Feynman, and it's unfortunate he was chosen to fill the role vacated by Feynman when he died.
That is, if we investigate further, we find that the statements of science are not of what is true and what is not true, but statements of what is known to different degrees of certainty: "It is very much more likely that so and so is true than that it is not true;" or "such and such is almost certain but there is still a little bit of doubt;" or – at the other extreme – "well, we really don't know." Every one of the concepts of science is on a scale graduated somewhere between, but at neither end of, absolute falsity or absolute truth.
He's no Richard Feynman, and it's unfortunate he was chosen to fill the role vacated by Feynman when he died.
If there's an influencing god, he likely resides somewhere in the heisenberg uncertainty principle.