pokermind wrote:My point is that a scientific idea can lead to just as atrocious behavior as a religious. Survival of the fittest the driving force of evolution was and is still used to back atrocious political theories. I was a little sarcastic when the post replied to said no scientist ever caused hatred. Interpretations by others in Religion and Science can cause bad things to happen. You can't blame God for the inquisition with out blaming Charles Darwin for the Holicost.
Respectfully, Poker, I think you're wrong.
When you speak of atrocious behavior, you're entering the territory of Morals, Ethics, and the concepts of Good and Evil. The comparison between Religion and Science in those fields is not appropriate because Science is not, and has never been (or included), an ethical framework of any kind. Gravity, magnetism, the process of nuclear fission, an asteroid falling and annihilating the big lizards, those things are neither evil nor good. They just are.
OTOH, Religion has always included, at its core, an ethical framework about what is considered "good and moral" behavior from its adherents (you know, the Ten Commandments, and its equivalents in other religions.) And MANY of the atrocious chapters in the history of Religion (any religion) have happened because people believed that, in order to be "good and moral" members of his faith, they should perform atrocious deeds. And still others thought that the atrocities they were committing were "good and moral" because their Holy Scripture said they were (or at least, said they weren't evil).
I do not blame God (even thought I don't believe in his existence) for the Crusades. I blame the Holy Bible, which condoned the invasion of the lands of "the infidels". I blame the corrupt high prelates of the time, who pushed the Christian lords into attacking other kingdoms, so they could plunder their riches. I blame them, because their religion coached the Crusades in terms of "it's the duty of every good and moral Christian lord".
The Theory of Evolution, pioneered by Darwin and Wallace, does not make any judgments on the "good or evil" of what happens. "Survival of the fittest" is neither good or evil. It's simply a descriptive phrase for what Darwin observed in nature. If someone went and created an ethical and moral framework around that phrase, that's something else entirely; since it's an ethical issue, you're more than welcome to agree or disagree with its tenets.
Lastly, Science has an ethics, of sorts. Only, it's not centered around its results being "good or evil", but rather about making sure that the process of scientific inquiry does not cross any ethical or moral lines. To use a fictional example from Nazi Germany: if Josef Mengele, in his horrendous, evil, unethical experiments, had discovered the cure for cancer, would employing that cure be an evil and unethical thing? Nope. The process of discovery may have crossed all moral and ethical lines you may care to mention, but the result, itself, is not morally or ethically suspect. It just is.