| The Public's View on Evolution vs. Creation:
According to a Gallup poll 60% of Republicans believe that "God created humans as in within the last 10,000 years," while 55% of independents and 56% of Democrats believe that "Humans developed over millions of years, God guided," or "Humans developed over millions of years, God had no part." Overall 50% of respondents believe in some type of evolutional theory; this number has stayed relatively constant since 1982.
In another Gallup poll respondents were asked if explanations about the origin and development of life on earth (evolution, creationism, and intelligent design) should or should not be taught in public school science classes. The results where that 61% thought evolution should be taught, 54% thought that creationism should be thought, and 43% thought that intelligent design should be thought.
However, the controversy of evolution and creationism seems to only be debated in the United States, even within the religious community. In a survey of 103 Roman Catholic priests, Anglican bishops and Protestant ministers/pastors in Brittan 97% did not believe that the world was created in six days, and 80% do not believe in the existence of Adam and Eve.
The Politics of Religion and Science:
The debate is not a scientific debate; the debate is a political debate. There is not a debate within the scientific community about whether or not evolution, creationism, or intelligent design should be taught in science classrooms. The theory of evolution is a scientific theory. Intelligent design and creationism are religious beliefs.
Moreover, intelligent design or creationism should not be taught in science classrooms if only for the simple reason that it is absolutely not science. Neither creationism nor intelligent design are testable hypothesis and they cannot be proven false and be their very nature not science.
The irony about the debate is the fundamental Christian organizations and individuals are simultaneously devaluing both education and their own religion. By undermining science they are promoting anti-intellectualism, and they are promoting the idea that someone else's beliefs are less valuable than their own. Through all of this there is also the underlying point that the religion your faith is not strong enough to be challenged by scientific ideas. There is an idea that somehow students cannot separate Sunday school class from their science class, or that they cannot have faith that God created the world while also understanding the scientific world.
Further Reaction from the Blogosphere
Capitol Annex:
An Interview with Dr. Eugenie Scott, Executive Director Of The National Center For Science Education
South Texas Chisme:
Why on earth would a modern day paper need to print this headline?
Millard Fillmore's Bathtub:
Ignorance of Evolution Damages Texas Business
Cross posted at the Daily Kos...
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