9/21/2008 2:08:26 AM
9/21/2008 2:46:45 AM
Fine, not "assert". "Describe", "define", "prove", "tell"... pick something. Whatever the terminology, it comes down to the fact that they both "say" through some means that the world works in a certain way.
9/21/2008 3:23:54 AM
Yes, but that's a pretty critical difference, particularly for the purposes of this thread.The reason that we allow one to "say" what it says in a science classroom and one NOT to say it in a science classroom is precisely what this debate is about. Science mandates logic and thrives on critical thinking. Teaching these things theoretically allows students to go and use them for the benefit of society. Religion doesn't require, and often shuns, those qualities, and don't have the same benefit educationally. The fact that religion and science might discuss similar issues is has no bearing on the issue of teaching religion in a scientific context. Religion can exist in a scientific context if it chooses to hold itself to a rational standard, but if it did that, it wouldn't be called religion.And the goal of science isn't to "prove" the world works a certain way, beyond building a base for future scientists to build on. Scientist don't do what they do in order to gain followers in society, they do it to advance the overall understanding of the world, any societal effects are byproducts to this goal.
9/21/2008 5:14:04 AM
9/21/2008 11:57:47 AM
You would think the Christian spiritual leaders would have learned their lesson after all the times they have been pwned since the renaissance. They should just accept the bible is not a historical database that has managed to stay 100% accurate after countless copying and translations. What makes more sense is while preserving the "message", moral-frame, and spiritual guidance offered from Jesus, to accept that science helps "clarify" the way in which god works.Hell 400 years ago the catholic church would have burned you at the stake for declaring the earth to not be flat and for the earth to not be in the center of the universe.I have actually heard that at the turn of the 20th century the prevalence of acceptance of evolution was pretty wide spread. Following WW1 and the rise of Nazi Germany that used social darwinism to justify their actions; a evangelical backlash in America fought to reestablish creationism as the "true" theory. Not until the cold war with Russia launching Sputnik did the federal gov't under fear that US science education was falling behind did the evolution debate spark back up.
9/21/2008 1:04:54 PM
http://arstechnica.com/reviews/other/discovery-textbook-review.ars/1
9/25/2008 12:31:29 AM
We (NC) may be off the hookhttp://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20080929/ARTICLES/809290288/1004I think we found out who arronburro really is, though - a middle aged black man with a daughter in southeast NC!
9/30/2008 5:46:45 PM
That kind of looks like Xzibit.
9/30/2008 8:00:27 PM
awww what the fuck is all this?I grew up in Brunswick Co. The positive news out of that section of the woods just continues to flow. First the sheriff, now this shit.
9/30/2008 10:32:37 PM
Perg were you taught Creationism in school?
10/1/2008 12:27:53 PM