I was trying to make the point regardless.
It's still jarring. If I were to say "So you agree that killing babies is wrong?" then that would appear as something of an accusation.
A significant proportion of cult members, while cults themselves are not a significant proportion. If you want to dismantle dangerous cults, go right ahead.
But again, this has drifted from the original point that "not all atheist converters are bastards".
OK, religion = Philosophy + superhuman agencies agreed upon by multiple people. Whether or not your personal religion would be recognized by the state as an official "religion" religion, probably not, but it would be a religion in personal regards.
an institution to express belief in a divine power; "he was raised in the Baptist religion"; "a member of his own faith contradicted him"
Basically, a key element of religion is the organized belief of something. If you don't have a structure in it, it's not a religion, just a philosophy or creed. And, if religion were to disappear somehow, science would certainly not become a "religion".
Guiding evolution?
Note that intelligent design is incompatible with
natural selection rather than evolution.
I haven't heard that since someone who believed in both creationism and evolution.
If they do, they've got one of the definitions wrong.
I suppose that could be a subset of intelligent design, but the idea behind intelligent design isn't that specific.
It'd be the biggest subset, really. I suppose you get physical "intelligent design" believers, but the biological ones are far more common.
Gah, look. Philosophy is just a hair away from religion.
Yes and no. I believe the unchecked hierarchy in a religion is part of what can make it dangerous (think the Pope and condoms... ugh). I feel that religions organized in this way can be dangerous in the same way that dictatorships can be dangerous.
Philosophy you consider scientific
I do not, as it is not a science.
The defining difference between the two is superhuman agencies, which can still be done in a scientific perspective. There's no compatibility issues.
No. The defining difference is the way by which answers are found. A religion looks back to old dogmas and its elders for guidance, while science (by definition - not always in practise, but by definition, anyway) is the process of empirical testing and observation. Religions have not come about their conclusions by testing or observations, and even if they have, they do not seek to verify or disprove previous claims.
Chicken and the egg? What? I'm looking at the intelligent design definition. It only outlines one level of creator/creations.
In which case it remains as flawed as it was before we invented genetic engineering.
"certain features ... of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as natural selection".
Yeah, but that's a piece of evidence they use, not a definition. In the same way that "We see different creatures in different layers of rock" is evidence for, but not a definition of, evolution.
This applies to those genetically modified tomatoes from the 80's.
Uh... no. They were genetically modified because we messed around with their gene coding. I suppose you could say it was intelligent intervention, but that'd just be a piece of pedantry based on a poorly worded definition.
The only other leading creation theory, selective spontaneous occurrences, doesn't explain them.
We don't need a theory to explain us changing something's genetic code. You don't need to create a new erosion theory to explain a house.
What was that you just said about "guided evolution" that I said I haven't heard since someone who takes creationism and evolution together?
Yes. That is exactly what I just said. "Guided evolution" would be a form of intelligent design, and would be compatible with evolution (but not natural selection). Creationism, on the other hand, is LITERAL belief in the biblical creation story. It is therefore totally incompatible with evolution.
I'm afraid arguing isn't a part of the scientific process. The scientist only needs to go as far as publish his results.
It is. The peer review process (not unique to science, incidentally - some humanities subjects, such as history, have it too) will often involve healthy debate. Note two different definitions of the word "argument". It doesn't have to involve yelling or getting angry.