Oh yeah, I remember that - amazing stuff!!! And no belief in a god or eternal spirit required. So if by spirituality you simply mean transcendent experiences then I agree some of the products of science and math do that. That's not the goal of science or math though - the goal is precision - to make sure were not just making crap up. Now obviously much of the spiritual experience is beyond anything that can be objectively studied, and therefore beyond the reach of science or math. And obviously, neither religion nor spirituality have anything to say about the Pythagoream Theorem or Evolution (aside from certain exremist branches of religion denying it of course), though they do like to try to make statements about some of the fringe ideas in science when those ideas seem to suggest something transcendent or when they introduce a new level of mystery - a new gap for God. But by its very nature science doesn't make assertions that can't be verified, which is exactly what religion and spirituality do.

However of course - science isn't a way to give life meaning like religion and spirituality - it's just a way of observing things intended to separate fact from fiction in objective terms (or as close as we can get to objectivity). So all I'm saying is, though sometimes we an derive a veru spiritual experience from science or math, that's not it's goal. It's more just a property of the real world, which is what science explores.