Cole grey, drop the statistics for a moment and take a good look around.
There are religious people that will Only Pray about it.
A family in Oklahoma is refusing to cooperate with police to help bring the rapist of their 13 year old daughter to justice because they believe they need to pray about it.
A family in California that refused their child medical treatment, instead, calling in a catholic exorcist. The child died.
those are sad stories, and there is a reason that stuff is on the news, it is because it is aberrant behavior. It isn't like they are using those stories at the end of the news report like a surfing dog story or whatever, it is real news, not a neighborhood fluff piece, because it is not normal.
What I was pointing out was that prayer is one thing- religious- but surgery was a different thing - secular- (Which at first, you argued that surgery was not secular)
i was pointing out that activity used by religious and secular people is not distinguished as anything but just "things all people do". If i wear a red hat and you wear a red hat, for the purpose of keeping our heads warm, you can't call wearing a red hat a "you" activity just because i also like to put a little flag pin on my red hat.
and that one is effective and one is not. Just because a bunch of people that pray ALSO use the secular and effective method of surgery does not detract from the lack of usefulness of prayer one bit.
i was saying that if you want to establish the ineffectiveness of prayer you would use hundreds of people doing the same thing, and have some of them praying and see what you got. You can't say, "these people prayed and didn't do anything else, and so were ineffective." The ineffectiveness of sitting around doing nothing is obvious to anyone not on the fringe. If people want to have prayer groups and spend an hour a week sitting around talking to God, that is immaterial because the 99.9% of the week they are living life, pushing things around and doing material world, cause-and-effect activity. They may just be "prayerfully" cutting off fifth limbs, effectively doing the same activities as everyone else.
This side argument has been a distraction from the rest of the thread and the side argument is pure semantics and useless. Maybe the problem is that I'm not being clear. But frankly, I think it's that your nitpicking at a triviality and detracting from discussion at this point.
i am pointing out a specific mistaken idea on your part, which has popped up in the thread multiple times, i.e. an incorrect insistence that prayer is for religious people a substitute for normal life, an idea which is only true for the fringe. I would consider a discussion on evolution a triviality at this juncture in scientific history, much more trivial than asking for a reasonable framing of what faith is, minus straw men, to see if there are reasonable reasons not to believe in God. I don't understand why religious people don't just say, "fine evolution is real but god was in charge of it", instead of worrying about it. Who cares? Only people trying to use the bible as ascience book need to worry about it.