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UK Government Mandates the Teaching of Evolution As Scientific Fact

An anonymous reader writes "A story at the BBC explains how the UK government has put an extra clause into a funding bill to ensure that any new 'free schools' (independent schools run by groups of parents or organizations, but publicly-funded) must teach evolution rather than creationism or potentially lose their funding. 'The new rules state that from 2013, all free schools in England must teach evolution as a 'comprehensive and coherent scientific theory.' The move follows scientists's concerns that free schools run by creationists might avoid teaching evolution. Sir Paul Nurse, president of the Royal Society, said it was 'delighted.' Sir Paul told BBC News the previous rules on free schools and the teaching of evolution versus creationism had been 'not tight enough.'"

51 of 783 comments (clear)

  1. good by aldousd666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    good

    --
    Speak for yourself.
    1. Re:good by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The government has a duty to step in when parents abuse their children. This is not up for debate, we do it all the time when we remove children from dangerous households.

      The only question is if this meets that bar or not.

    2. Re:good by Reverand+Dave · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If someone proposes a better theory, it will be tested and if it meet the bar it will be followed. It's not like evolutionists are closed minded idiots acting on faith, they're scientists and act based on verifiable evidence. I think you have evolutionists confused with the ID crowd.

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    3. Re:good by DickBreath · · Score: 4, Informative

      The new theory would still have to explain all currently observed evidence as well as any new evidence not explained by current theory. If there is no new evidence, then the new theory would need to be an even simpler explanation of all current evidence, and also have predictive power.

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    4. Re:good by Thansal · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, bad.

      Just because it is the supported theory, and all the archeological evidence does support it, and we of the scientific community hold that it is the 99% best supported explanation, it is not a fact.

      If it was truly a fact, then no more resources would be spent studying evolution. And, it is way too soon to close that checkbook.

      I really think it is bad when politicians and fools get involved with science.

      and that's why you at least read the summary, instead of the terribly written title:

      "...all free schools in England must teach evolution as a 'comprehensive and coherent scientific theory.'"

      They aren't required to teach it as fact, they are simply required to actually teach it (no hand waving or "the evil overlords that oppose us require us to tell you about their lies").

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    5. Re:good by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are no supernatural theories. They cannot exist as they are not testable and therefore not theories.

      If you want to say myth or guess, just say so.

    6. Re:good by lattyware · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Schools, just like our legal system, should be based on logic and fact. We should teach the most likely explanation (or that we simply don't know) given experiment, research and evidence. That is the only sane way to proceed.

      Of course people should be allowed to believe whatever they want - but that does not belong in the classroom or law, as it's not based on logic and reason. (Naturally, subjects like RE are fine as they are about the fact that many people do believe in religion, and the culture around it. Unfortunately, my experience of RE was a teacher peddling logically unsound stuff (pascal's wager, paley's watch, etc - pseudo-logic that is damaging to children as it will set bad precedent for their reasoning skills.)

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      -- Lattyware (www.lattyware.co.uk)
    7. Re:good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with evolution completely, and yet it's plain that is a very, very nasty slippery slope that anyone who cares about human rights should fear greatly.

      Actually, I strongly suspect that you do not in fact agree at all with evolution, and are using the bogus human rights argument in an attempt to muddy the waters and pretend you're arguing against requiring state funded schools to teach reality for reasons other than defending your religiously predetermined ignorance.

      If you don't like what your kids are being taught, you can always pull them out of the state funded free school, and pay for them to be educated elsewhere. Just remember that if your kids are educated in what amounts to a sham of a school that doesn't prepare them to face the real world, their job prospects are going to be minimal, and their education will be worthless. The government in the meantime, has not only the "right" to determine the curriculum at the schools they fund, they also have a responsibility to do so. There's nothing slippery about this, nor is there anything sloped, and it has nothing to do with human rights - the only reason to claim otherwise is if you're pushing a hidden agenda to remove content you don't agree with, despite the unfortunate truth of the matter.

    8. Re:good by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 4, Informative

      Firstly, explanatory power alone does not make a scientific theory. Personally I'm a big fan of the various multiverse theories, they provide a very elegant solution to the fine tuning problem and various other issues, but the problem is they explain EVERYTHING. Want to know why a bug flew in your mouth last week? Multiverse theory. The problem is that it makes no testable predictions, and as such is not yet science.

      Secondly, yes, absolutely, if something we teach in schools is shown to be wrong then we should change it, and there is no shame in this. Physics education does this a lot - age 15 you get Newton's Laws, then at 16 the teacher explains that this isn't really what's going on and it's just a limiting case, then you get Relativity. Darwin's original theory is viewed in much the same way as Newton's Laws anyway, it's a few-hundred-year-old theory which doesn't stand up to very deep scrutiny, but DOES have a modern descendant which has had a few of the wrinkles ironed out.

      Backing down and admitting you're wrong when faced with evidence isn't bad for science, it IS science.

      Aside: for any non-UK Slashdotters wondering about UK politics and religion, we tend to keep the two separate. You'll sometimes hear a politician refer to god (as Blair somewhat infamously did over Iraq), and there is a lot of "god" in our legal and political oaths etc, but the electorate (even the religious ones) don't much care for "I'm voting like this because god says so", we prefer our leaders to keep their faith in a place of worship and their politics in the House of Commons.

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    9. Re:good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree. I think teaching children about fictional all powerful beings as if they were real is a form of abuse. This perpetuates a society which can't distinguish between right and wrong, real and imagined, and fosters abuse of the minority (be it communists, pedophiles, African Americans, gypsies, jews, or some other group).

    10. Re:good by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You may teach your children as you like, but to never teach them about evolution is abuse.

      I could easily come up with dozens of scientific theories and concepts that are certainly more important to be taught than evolution.

      Do you consider it abuse to not teach kids about Newton's laws of motion? Sadly, I would be willing to bet that most products of the public education system have a better concept of evolution than of inertia.

      This is the problem that I have with the whole evolution/creationism in education debate: the theory of evolution is just not that important. The loudmouths on both sides of this debate aren't interested in education; they're just using it as a proxy to attack their political enemies.

      Try fixing the general state of science education, and then you can go attack the evolution in education question all you want.

      --

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    11. Re:good by HaZardman27 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Then teach your children without public funding. That's what this is all about. It doesn't appear that privately funded "free schools" are required to teach evolution.

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      Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
    12. Re:good by drosboro · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree. You may teach your children as you like, but to never teach them about evolution is abuse.

      I'm a biology teacher at a Christian school. I do teach evolution - with far more rigour than I ever taught it in public school - because I think that it's important for anyone who wants to hold a dissenting view on something considered to be this foundational to be really, really well informed about what they're disagreeing with. That said, I also work with students who have actually been abused by their parents - real abuse... emotional, physical, sexual, etc. Dogmatically stating "never teaching a child about evolution is abuse" just seems silly and insulting to anyone who has actually encountered abuse. Let's not throw the term "abuse" around so lightly.

    13. Re:good by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I could easily come up with dozens of scientific theories and concepts that are certainly more important to be taught than evolution. ... The theory of evolution is just not that important.

      I'll put it this way: Trying to do modern biology without learning evolution is like trying to do modern chemistry without learning how the periodic table works.

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    14. Re:good by thisnamestoolong · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Telling your children that if they misbehave you will throw them in a furnace: Abuse
      Telling your children that if they misbehave God will throw them in a furnace: Not Abuse?

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    15. Re:good by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The reason this issue is important is not because the theory of evolution is important, but because allowing the creationist alternative means undermining the validity of the entire Scientific Method and endorsing religious Faith as "scientific" instead.

      --

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    16. Re:good by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To protect the child?

      Those parents should also be required to teach him to read, write, do math even if they think algebra is the work of evil mooslims.

    17. Re:good by Princeofcups · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I could easily come up with dozens of scientific theories and concepts that are certainly more important to be taught than evolution.

      Do you consider it abuse to not teach kids about Newton's laws of motion?

      No one is teaching their kids that Newtonian Dynamics is bunk and all objects move only because god will it.

      --
      The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican.
    18. Re:good by ilsaloving · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think the problem is a unique one. Well, almost unique. There are (too many) people out there who not just deny evolution exists, but rabidly so. They go so far as to try to get local education ministries to change their curriculum to suit their own twisted world view.

      You mention Newton's laws, but that's not comparable. There are no groups of people roaming the countryside with placards in hand trying to deny that gravity exists and insisting that schools teach students that an big invisible hand is coming out of the sky and pushing things down towards the ground.

      There is nothing fundamentally wrong with the state of science education itself. The problem is all the whackjob morons out there that *think* they know better, trying to undermine the efforts of said education.

      This is evolution we're talking about. It is an indisputable fact. If they were trying to pass legislation demanding that, say, pre-birth fetuses are actually parasitic organisms, then I can see it being a controversy. But to mandate that everyone is required to teach a fundamental, indisputable fact of our reality, to me makes sense, in the same way that teaching mathematics as defined by mathematicians (ie: NOT 2+2=67) makes sense.

      I see it as an attempt to nip a potentially massive source of bullshit and future headaches in the bud.

    19. Re:good by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's absurd. There's no agenda to atheism. By definition, *there's nothing to believe in*.

      If I told you I was an a-unicorn-ist (that is, someone that doesn't believe in unicorns) would you think that I have some sort of agenda? Some sort of RELIGION?

      At best, you can describe atheism as a philosophy, but it's more accurate not to call it anything at all. It's like the number 0. It's there, it's useful to define the absence of something (i.e., I have 0 oranges at my desk), but in the end, there's literally no belief structure tied to it at all.

      You can make the point that there are ANTI-religious people and that THEY have an agenda, but don't tell me I have a religion specifically because I don't believe in any of them.

    20. Re:good by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Interesting

      do math even if they think algebra is the work of evil mooslims.

      Algebra was in fact largely invented by Muslim scholars, particularly Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi, which is why its name is derived from Arabic (as is "algorithm"). Smart guys from the Muslim world were key to maintaining knowledge and learning in the world while Christian Europeans were busy killing each other and dying of the plague from about 600 CE to 1400 CE.

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    21. Re:good by Chrisje · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are right about one thing. It is a psychological cliche to believe you are a better than average driver. Indeed.

      However, as I argued above, I feel many atheists simply don't believe because they haven't seen anything to support the notion there is something to believe in.

      Quite honestly, I don't understand your notion that atheism is truth. For all I know one day we can all be caught with our knickers down when we do discover there is a supreme being of some sort, even if it could be a wanker like Q from star trek.

      The thing that most atheists would like is this:

      - Quit trying to debunk factual phenomenon because they don't fit your antiquated book
      - Quit trying to impose a system on morality on others based on what some dude with a beard wrote in Babylon 2500 years ago (talking about Torah here)

      That's not so much debunking Christianity / Judaism / Islam as more trying to get the Christians / Jews / Muslims to shove it into our faces all the time with shitty and immoral legislation.

  2. You shouldn't have to mandate this by clickclickdrone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously, when you have to pass a law to ensure fairy tales aren't taught as facts in school, something is horribly wrong with society.

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    1. Re:You shouldn't have to mandate this by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Seriously, when you have to pass a law to ensure fairy tales aren't taught as facts in school, something is horribly wrong with society.

      There is a precedent - outlawing Holocaust denialism. Ordinarily, being an idiot isn't a crime, but when it starts posing danger to others, you generally make it one (ditto for safety code violations when someone else than the idiot gets hurt etc.). It's not very systematic, I'll give you that, but I don't think anyone in the world has come up with a better idea to this day.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    2. Re:You shouldn't have to mandate this by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No it is not. As a former fundamentalist biblical literalist, I can say firmly that you have to discount the idea that science is valid in order to hold onto those ideals. I am extremely happy that I woke up and saved myself from the sickness of faith.

    3. Re:You shouldn't have to mandate this by BMOC · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The whole point of teaching science is to hope that people will find that things are wrong with it and improve on it. But without a solid understanding on the scientific method, what we observe now, how we interpret that evidence and why the current body of knowledge is accepted, people cannot possibly understand WHY the science is wrong (when it's wrong) and how to fix it.

      No, wrong. The whole point of teaching science is teaching kids the proper way to think and approach problems. The appropriate way to think does not include clinging to one particular viewpoint because it's fashionable, whatever that viewpoint may be.

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    4. Re:You shouldn't have to mandate this by kid_wonder · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well, it's all the brits fault to begin with.
      You *had* to have your stupid tea tax didn't you? See how silly that sounds now?
      Yeah, now look at you. McDonalds on every corner, getting fat and fundamentalist.
      Look at what you have wrought.
      I could have been a nice, loyal, queen-loving, crooked-teeth-having, meat-pie eating subject, but noooooo you had to be a tough guy.

      Thanks England!

      --

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    5. Re:You shouldn't have to mandate this by kenaaker · · Score: 4, Interesting
      B.S.

      "On The Origin of Species" by Charles Darwin was banned and probably burnt in Germany on orders from the Nazi leadership by being included in the category of "All writings that ridicule, belittle or besmirch the Christian religion and its institution, faith in God, or other things that are holy to the healthy sentiments of the Volk." http://www.library.arizona.edu/exhibits/burnedbooks/documents.htm#guidelines

    6. Re:You shouldn't have to mandate this by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is a horrible precedent. Evolution is likely the correct explanation for life on earth, but what happens when science is wrong? (it often is, that's how we learn) Do we then just say "oops, sorry, we didn't mean to legislate teaching you what wasn't known for certain yet."

      Find me one piece of credible, scientific evidence for creationism. Go ahead, I'll wait.

      So far, people have put forth theories to try to shore up their belief in creationism, but there's precisely zero evidence for it. The best attempt I've ever seen is "this is so complex it couldn't have happened through natural processes, therefore it must have been magic".

      We have observed evolution and speciation. We haven't observed any creation occurring, nor is there any evidence for it.

      So when people try to teach creationism in school, it largely amounts to a religious point of view, and is presented as if it's an equally valid "theory" -- because they abuse the scientific definition of "theory" to say "well, that's just what you think". (If Newton had proposed the law of Gravity in the last 100 years or so, it would stil be a theory.)

      Politicians should not be involving themselves in science, lest they quickly become little better than a monarchy.

      They're not dictating the outcomes of scientific endeavors, they're saying that since there is no credible scientific evidence for creationism -- you can't teach it alongside science as an equally valid view, because there is precisely zero science involved in it.

      If the public is paying for people to be educated, it expects people to come out of that system understanding what is real and what isn't. Creationism isn't objective reality, it's trying to make the universe adhere to your religious beliefs.

      So, if you want to teach your children that 2+2=58 million, that water is made up gumdrops and moonbeams, and that some creator god whipped up the world in 7 literal days ... well, you can bloody well pay for it yourself, and expect them to be mocked relentlessly when they get out into the world.

      But all those people saying that fossils were there to test their faith, and that the world is only 6000 years old -- well, we can't exactly accept that their version of reality is equally valid so we don't hurt their feelings, especially when it contradicts real physical measurements.

      If there is a creator god, he/she/it is vastly more complex and unknowable in light of everything we know about the universe. it would have to encompass everything we know about physical reality. And if people can't include reality in their religious beliefs, it's not the states job to pay for funding their version of it.

      I've known professors of computational astrophysics who are still quite religious. They have no problem with the duality of it -- because if God did create the universe, he's so far outside of any of the bits we can ever directly see and measure, that you have to take those parts on faith.

      Science and religion deal with different areas of human endeavour. But you can't twist science to match what your religion tells you.

      Creationism is not a scientific theory by any meaningful definition. It isn't testable, falsifiable, or evidence based. It's based on thousands of years of beliefs, most of which were borrowed from civilizations which came before the religions who now say that their bible tells them that the world was created in 7 days (the creation myth was borrowed from the Sumerians or Babylonians almost verbatim).

      You should be free to believe whatever you think god has told you about morality and the like -- but it really can't be placed along side of science as a plausible alternate answer to these questions.

      --
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    7. Re:You shouldn't have to mandate this by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 4, Informative

      Your kidding right? Evolution as a process, like most scientific theories it has predictive and explanatory power. We see that evolution happens, take drug resistant bacteria. We see how with selective breeding in just a few thousand years we can have widely divergent dog breeds and types of plants. In our world of computers, Genetic algorithms can solve difficult problems by just following those parts of genetics that combine parts of solutions and introduces mutations and a survival rule that culls the herd. It works, I have done that. I have come up with 'intelligent' answers to problems that the only driving principle was survival, not some unseen intelligent force. So we know that the process of Evolution is a fact and practical. The teaching of creationism on the other hand is a cop out. They claim the world is 6000 years old, they claim dinosaurs co-existed with man (and woman), that man (and woman) suddenly appeared full sized and full figured in God's image (he must have been a Black Man then). That the scientists have it all wrong about radioactive decay and tree rings and layers of sediment to show when things happened. They are much like some segments of the political parties that have no problem of making up facts to fit their theories. And also we know they think that Rape is part of God's design.

      I'm sorry but there is no equivalence here. None. It is the same equivalence that is being drawn by those in politics that say that both political parties are the same. A little rational thought is in order.

  3. Re:I disagree. by pluther · · Score: 5, Funny

    I agree. Life is too complex to have evolved by chance. Only a Giant and a Cow can explain it. (http://www.thepaincomics.com/Science%20vs.%20Norse.jpg)

    --
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  4. Cool by _0x783czar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm a creationist, and I have no problem with this. School systems' curriculum has to be governed by science first. I likely don't have a problem with this, because I don't claim to know how God created everything. From a faith-based point of view, I have some problems with Evolution, but I don't see how that should govern the curriculum in schools. I see Science as our way of understanding God's power, we may not understand everything yet, but if we don't endeavor to learn everything we can through Science, we will only block our own growth.

    --
    ~theCzar
    1. Re:Cool by mr1911 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I likely don't have a problem with this, because I don't claim to know how God created everything. From a faith-based point of view, I have some problems with Evolution

      It is not about how science fits in to your religion's book of stories. Science is observable whereas religion is believed only because the believer wants to, or, more likely, is afraid of the punishment their religion promises for deviating from the church. It is amazing how people dismiss science to believe their religious teachings, quite often centered around an all-loving, all-forgiving deity that will send them to eternal suffering for failing to believe properly.

      we may not understand everything yet, but if we don't endeavor to learn everything we can through Science, we will only block our own growth.

      The most sensible statement I have ever seen by someone self-identifying as a creationist. Congratulations, but saying such sensible things might get you thrown out of the creationist club!

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    2. Re:Cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It is amazing how people dismiss science to believe their religious teachings, quite often centered around an all-loving, all-forgiving deity that will send them to eternal suffering for failing to believe properly.

      It's not amazing at all. I begin with some prior probability distribution that describes my set of beliefs about the origins of the universe. I then encounter some data that purports to support the idea that the universe is almost 14 billion years old. What happens to my beliefs?

      The naive answer (that they shift in the direction of believing the universe is 14 billion years old) is wrong. In reality, each of us applies a small probability that the data is just wrong (last year, OPERA claimed 6-sigma evidence for superluminal neutrinos. Everybody thought this was a mistake - we didn't all start doubting relativity a bit.) Now, if my prior probability for the universe being 14 billion years old is of any reasonable size, the data does what you expect - it increases my belief in a 14 billion year old universe. If, on the other hand, my prior beliefs are that there is scarcely any or no chance that the universe is old, after getting the new data I think it's far more likely that the universe is young, the data is wrong, and probably that there's evidence of a conspiracy to hide the truth. This is why it's hard to convince a young-earth type of the age of the universe by showing him the data - his prior probabilities are distributed such that the extra data just hardens his position.

  5. U.S. christians and muslims and jews -not issue by iggymanz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Most educated christians and muslims and Jews have no problem with evolution, despite the stereotypes thrown about on slashdot by people obsessed with a certain minority. While establishing his theory of evolution, and for many years after Charles Darwni himself continued to be a practicing Christian

    1. Re:U.S. christians and muslims and jews -not issue by roninmagus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Most educated christians and muslims and Jews have no problem with evolution, despite the stereotypes thrown about on slashdot by people obsessed with a certain minority. While establishing his theory of evolution, and for many years after Charles Darwni himself continued to be a practicing Christian

      As an "educated" Christian myself who believes in Evolution led by God, I used to think exactly what the parent says here. Unfortunately, that statement is just not true. 46% of adult Americans believe that humans were created by God in their present form, less than 10,000 years ago. I was very troubled when I saw that. As for those who hold my belief, 32%. http://www.gallup.com/poll/155003/hold-creationist-view-human-origins.aspx

  6. Re:I disagree. by vidarlo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    People should be taught both and then left alone to decide which one makes more sense.

    Should they be taught all the other creation myths around the world also?

    There is one hell of a difference between creationism and evolution. Evolution is a proven scientific fact, observed and documented independently many times. Teaching about the bibles view in religious education (which British school has as far as I know)? Yes, it is part of the religious education.

    But it is NOT part of science education, as little as turning water into wine by magic is in a brewers course.

  7. Re:I disagree. by wickerprints · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Last time I checked, the educational process does not involve the presentation of scientific falsehoods as if they were truth, then expecting students to determine for themselves which is which. That would be fundamentally intellectually dishonest. "Teach the controversy/debate/both sides" is nothing more than a naked attempt at putting creationism on equal footing with science.

  8. Re:I disagree. by Idimmu+Xul · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People should be taught both and then left alone to decide which one makes more sense.

    Which form of creationism would you like them to teach?

    Young-Earth creationism
    Old Earth creationism
    Gap creationism
    Day-Age creationism
    Progressive creationism
    Neo-Creationism
    Intelligent design
    Creation science
    Theistic evolution (evolutionary creation)
    Omphalos hypothesis

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  9. Re:20-50-100 years from now by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What will the Government decide must be taught in schools?

    In my country, it already does. It's called "the national curriculum".

    I had a teacher split the class into 2 sides, those who believe in God and those who believe in evolution. There was me and a very nervous oriental student on the evolution side. I didn't win the debate, but I put up a good fight.

    You don't believe in evolution - you accept it, just as you accept the map of the Solar system and the periodic table. There's no place for believing.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  10. Re:What if.... by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Funny

    that view makes God a liar, deceiver and prankster..

    Oh, so you have read the old testament.

  11. Re:20-50-100 years from now by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What the fuck? You can't believe in God and also believe in evolution now? What was your teacher trying to prove?

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  12. Re:20-50-100 years from now by gorzek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That is a great summary of the basic issue.

    Science is the process by which we expand and refine our knowledge. It is not a system of belief. The debate has been framed in such a way that you have two sets of beliefs--science and religion--and they are in conflict, but on equal ground. Applied more broadly, this is an illustration of "my opinions are just as good as your facts." It comes from people who fundamentally misunderstand what science is and how it works.

  13. Re:20-50-100 years from now by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You don't have to just accept it. Challenge it, test it, prove it invalid if you can. That is called science.

    And the theory of evolution has been placed in that crucible and come out the other side intact, even if it is shaped a bit differently than it started.

  14. Re:I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People should be taught both and then left alone to decide which one makes more sense.

    That's frankly, the stupidest solution possible.

    If this reasoning were applied:
    1. Physics classes would teach "the 4 elements", and all the other crap the Greeks believe just because Aristotle said it.
    2. Chemistry would teach the "grand arcana" and how you can live longer by drinking mercury.
    3. Astronomy would teach the "crystal spheres" theory, the "circular orbits with epicycles" theory, and the "the gods just move things around at their discretion" theory.
    4. Any student could derail any class at will by making some shit up and demanding that the class dedicate time to teaching it and letting everyone make up their mind.

    The truth is that Creationism is not a valid theory (it's a story from a book that was probably fiction when it was written*), and if you want it to be taken seriously as a competitor to evolution by natural selection the burden of proof is on you to demonstrate that it 1) explains observed behavior at least as well as evolution and 2) makes falsifiable predictions which conflict with evolution that are verified by experimentation.

    *No historical evidence exists to corroborate the events aside from the text who's authenticity is in question, and many of the events are believed to by physically impossible. Occam's Razor indicates it's more likely those events never actually happened, than that there is an as yet not understood mechanism that allows them to be true.

  15. Oh, cripes, not THIS again. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 4, Informative
    Hitler was sort of a neo-Pagan quasi-Christian who explicitly rejected evolution and based his racism on the idea that the 'races' had been created separately. The Holocaust owed far more to the virulent strain of anti-Semitism that Martin Luther embraced and fostered. That was certainly the motivation for the majority who actually carried out the crimes in person.

    BTW, as to the Communist states under Stalin and Mao - they also explicitly rejected neo-Darwinian evolution and embraced (and enforced) Lysenkoism instead. The resulting crop failures when reality failed to match up to "worker's science" killed a huge fraction - possibly the majority - of the millions who died under those regimes.

    Ironically, the people under Hitler, Stalin, and Mao would have been better off if their leaders had accepted neo-Darwinian evolution.

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    1. Re:Oh, cripes, not THIS again. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And even if Hitler took the Theory of Evolution and twisted it to his own devices (which, as you pointed out, he didn't), that doesn't mean you toss out the Theory of Evolution. You just ditch his twisted and distorted mis-usage of the theory. Hitler also took rocket science and used that to kill a lot of people, but that doesn't mean we don't use rockets to go into space.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  16. Re:20-50-100 years from now by shilly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. We Britons have decided we want to purchase education through collective taxation as a society. If we're going to buy education, it makes sense for our legislature to have some say over the content of what we buy, just as other purchasers would. Blah blah slippery slope doesn't really cut it, ya know. Not when you don't acknowledge that there are downsides to the *non*involvement of government in education, including lack of access, no standards guarantor, costs going through the roof, the private biases of proprietors affecting the content of what is taught, etc etc.

    2. Science teachers don't merely teach pupils to accept evolution as fact. They explain how it's been tested and why it stands. That said, you wouldn't be able to do very much science teaching (or science) if you have to explain the tests applied to absolutely every aspect of science.

  17. Re:20-50-100 years from now by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A great example of the problem.
    You lost a debate that was unloseable.

    How could they have won? They have 0 evidence.

  18. Re:20-50-100 years from now by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My primary 7 (~10yrs old) teacher went one further - she would ask us to say which side of a debate we were on to start with, and regularly had us argue for the opposite side. Brilliant exercise in thinking properly and one I still practice today, it's lead to at least one bar fight. Totally worth it.

    --
    Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
  19. Re:20-50-100 years from now by gorzek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you believe science leads to facts or to truth - the real truth if you will - then you are making assumptions for which you have no proof.

    That is not the purpose of science. The purpose of science is to improve our understanding of the universe and how it works. The ultimate truth about how everything works is likely to be unknowable, always limited by the tools available to us and our ability to mentally grasp and understand them. However, it does produce a clearer and clearer picture over time. Sometimes it is wrong, and we later learn better. It is not perfect, but it is the best method we have for exploring and understanding our universe.

    First, you assume that there is no intelligent guiding hand who happens to choose to make things behave in a mathematically coherent way most of the time (but who may change things a bit when a point needs to be made).

    Science does not assume this, it simply fails to a) find evidence of such an "intelligent guiding hand" and b) has encountered no situations which require an "intelligent guiding hand" to explain them.

    You're assuming that your brain is functioning properly and that you're sense of logic is correct - that If a implies b and b implies c, that a does imply c.

    Which is why science is not advanced by the conclusions of any one scientist, but of many who work independently and review each other's work. It is a group effort, never relying solely on the research or conclusions of any one individual, who may have taken a flawed approach.

    Perhaps it does, or perhaps you believe it so fervently that anytime something contradicts it you refuse to see it and come up with some other excuse. Perhaps the logic of the universe is incredibly simple and the only reason we keep having to invent new smaller particles and weird forms of matter is that our brains have a fundamental flaw that doesn't let us see the logic. Of course, none of these other ideas can be proven, but neither can your idea that science reveals the real truth.

    There is no evidence that this is the case. You are essentially implying that your "intelligent guiding hand" deliberately plays tricks on all of us. If it does, it does so in a completely consistent manner, which means the science is still valid. But such an agent is not required in our explanation.

     

    Instead we find that science seems to work for us so we use it, and it has been very reliable. That's good enough to make it part of our curriculum. That's good enough for us to trust our lives to it when we get surgery or fly through the sky at Mach 1. But we go too far if we declare that science is therefor the only truth. Looking at it logically, we just can't be sure. So people who try to push science are fine, but people who try to push science to the exclusion of everything else are indeed promoting a religious belief.

    "Knowledge" and "truth" are not the same thing, nor did I equate them. That was all you.

    As I like to say, science tells us the "how," but does not care about the "why." The "why" is left for philosophy and religion. Where the latter overstep their bounds is in saying science is wrong because it contradicts them.