Do you really mean to imply that praying and raping someone are equivalent actions? If so, I respectfully disagree.
Don't forget the "based on faith" part, Bri. When you leave out little things like that, you change the topic. If both are based on faith, they are rationally equivalent. But you knew that was what we were talking about.
Nonetheless, as you admitted, the rationality of a belief doesn't necessarily indicate the morality of using that belief to justify action. Therefore, the morality of actions are irrelevant to a discussion of the rationality of belief, despite the temptation to confuse the two. I assumed this straw man to be unintentional, but as you continue to make the argument, it seems less and less likely to be unintentional.
This is what I have been telling
you, Bri. Are you paying attention?
I don't recall any previous mention that the belief that sex with a virgin cures AIDS came from a conversation with God, aliens, or anyone else. So, if the belief didn't come from a conversation with God or aliens, is raping a virgin any less morally repugnant?
It is a religious belief. Most people who do this do so because their shaman or witch doctor (who speaks to the spirits) has told them it will work. It is essentially a religious ritual, like praying is a religious ritual.
What part of the scientist's belief wasn't based on faith alone?
The biggest straw man is of course that belief in the
possibility of intelligent life elsewhere is not the same as belief in the
certainty of intelligent life elsewhere. Then of course, the demand for money is not a faith-based thing but greed-based thing. And of course, his anger at the politician is based on his feeling of betrayal and the broken "promise" that the politician made. And of course, the reasoning that the aliens would figure out how to end world hunger is giving the aliens specific characteristics, nothing at all like believing in the possibility of intelligent life of some kind.
I could go on and on, but the simple fact is that this is a totally straw-filled scenario, one that has, as far as I am aware of, no basis in reality. But people
have killed because God told them to. Many times.
There is also weak evidence showing that prayer works.
Very weak. And yet, with all the praying that goes on and all the things it could affect that would be very easy to see, the weakness of the evidence is damning.