Well, no. There is a considerable difference between humans and other animals. I don't disagree that humans are animals, but I certainly disagree that humans are the same as other animals. If you can't recognize the difference in our society, culture, arts, sciences, mathematics, philosophy, psychology, politics, et cetera (not quite ad infinitum but for a while at least) then I think that you're not paying attention! Whether you think these things make us better or worse than animals is ultimately irrelevant; we are still not 'just animals'. We have a planet, biological functions and some instincts in common but very little more. It doesn't mean that we have a divine gift, nor does it mean that nothing in the universe will ever compare to our blinding brilliance. Just means we're different.
Everything you listed is a function of us trying to make sense of the world and live in it. Nothing here to show we are anything but just animals. What would being more than just animal even mean? Dolphins have language. Are they just animals? Ants have complex living arrangements. Are they more than just animals? Our attempts may be more sophisticated but still just the actions of animals. Biologically, there is no such thing as more than just animal.
I think you're more 'being' orientated by my definition yes?
Interestingly I wrote not that long ago a short essay/article regarding the differences between Atheism, Agnostic Atheism, Agnostic Theism and Theism. Religion isn't inherently bad and science isn't inherently good; dogmas of course do exist in science and you'll find quite a few scientists these days who set out to prove or justify X rather than find the truth. Insisting that religion is nonsense/there is no possibility of a deity/etc is no more logical or empirical than insisting that there is.
Science doesn't answer everything, and really I don't see why it should. That's why questions such as "Why are we here?" "Is there a god?" and "What happens when we die?" are ultimate questions rather than stupid questions.
I didn't say religion was good or bad, I said it was nonsense. The only sensible way to investigate the world is through the principles of peer reviewed scientific methods. Any scientist cheating in order to prove a theory will be found out as soon as the study is peer reviewed and other scientists cannot produce the same results. This is why it is not dogmatic the way revealed wisdom is.
Actually it is very logical to dismiss the possibility of a deity. It is an illogical proposition (I will expand if necessary). Certainly we must allow the possibility of a deity, however because something is possible does not make it as probable as everything else. The two positions are not equiprobable. Of course we must all be technically agnostic however one can be a de facto atheist in that one lives under the assumption there is no god.
Your ultimate questions can in principal be answered by science and certainly more likely that than by any other means I can think of.
For the record, I am not that religious and the conclusion to which the aforementioned article came is that Atheism is the Religion of Postmodernism.
Nonsense. Atheism has nothing to do with postmodernism. It is postmodernist to argue that all possibilities are equal. Atheism cannot, by definition, be dogmatic or like a religion as it is simply a lack of belief and has no articles of faith. Your conclusion therefore was flawed.