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Addressing Religious Beliefs (Intelligent Design) In Class
American School Board Journal ^
| 4/12/06
| Benjamin Dowling-Sender
Posted on 04/12/2006 11:48:01 AM PDT by Paddlefish
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To: Paddlefish
You make too much of the law's reach in this issue. By "law" I mean the law as any trial lawyer would practise it in court these days. This is a transcendental issue, and not at all held within the cup of the "law". Dover is politics, not law. Poltics is religion. Religion is public. Like the Scopes ruling, the Dover ruling itself is not law, but legend. Political, religious, public legend.
It was Scope's lawyer Darrow who entered a plea of guilty for Scopes, once he had done the job of establishing a legend. The Judge in Dover heard the siren song of "Legend!" and ruled accordingly. Not law at all.
The practical gist of what I suggest is that EVERY case in these matters is sui generis. A crap shot. There is no law.
Nay, the winner of future cases is the one that comes off more legendary!
41
posted on
04/15/2006 9:27:12 PM PDT
by
bvw
To: bvw
Actually, I didn't think that the law had much "reach" at all in the Dover case. Every school board that considers the issue now will decide upon different language and different approaches so that the precedential value of the Dover District Court's opinion is fairly minimal from a legal standpoint. However, the DI article made much of various legal aspects of the post-trial, pre-decision actions of the Board, and they are, at best, seriously misleading and, at worst, (fill in the blank).
BTW, in the History Channel's review of the Scopes trial last Wed., I found this tidbit to be most interesting. Paraphrasing: Most people thought that Scopes was a victory for evolution. It wasn't. After the decision, a number of other states banned the teaching of evolution in public schools. It wasn't until the Russians shocked the US in the late 50's with their space program that the US realized that it had to catch up scientifically and evolution then became the nationwide standard. (I don't know if it's true, but I don't know that it isn't).
42
posted on
04/15/2006 10:03:27 PM PDT
by
Paddlefish
(Having the loudest instrument in the band doesn't make you the best player, or even a musician.)
To: Paddlefish
Thanks for the honest answers and reply. I am not up to speed to much on Johnson and his HIV/AIDS theory and should probably google it. If memory recalls he is in the Duesberg/Gilbert category?
My eyebrow has been raised a few times with the direction/statements of the DI. I wish they would sometimes just shut up. IMO ID has taken a strange turn lately and it bothers me. I support the ideas and general theoretical model but the way it is being approached reminds me of the way the GOP is handling the illegal immigration issue. Neither one sets well.
Thanks again for your reply. I was afraid that this thread was going to go by and no one was going to talk about the topic, which seems to happen a lot on the ID/EVO threads.
Happy FReepin'
K4
To: Paddlefish
I remember the whole neighborhood going out in the street at night to look for Sputnik -- the Russian's first satellite! That was October 1957. The National Defense Education Act was in 1958 -- that really initiated the FedGov reach into colleges and soon enough, all schools at every level (by 1965 they had reached al the way to pre-K with the Head Start Program). It was in reaction to the Russian missile and space program. The secularist legend-making movie about the Scopes Trial, "Inherit the Wind", was released in 1960. In 1962 the Supreme Court forbade a nondenominational "Regents" in school recitation of prayer in NY (iirc). In 1963 the Supreme Court outlawed any mandatory Bible verse recitation. The "God is Dead" cover of Time magazine appeared in April 1966. He was murdered by the zeitgeist of the fifties and sixties, so it seems.
That timeline supports your theory, and imo, having lived through the fifties and sixties as a student and as the child of an educator and political activist my opinion may be worth something: I agree with you in large part.
However we should consider a few other timeline markers:
- In 1916, forty-one years before Sputnik, nine years before Scopes, educator John Dewey published his landmark "Democracy and Education".
- In 1927, thirty years before Sputnik, two years after Scopes, Bertrand Russell, reknowned, polymath, philosopher, atheist, published "Why I Am Not a Christian: And Other Essays on Religion and Related Subjects".
- In 1933, twenty-four years before Sputnik, eight three years after Scopes, The Humanist Mianifesto" was composed, signed and announced loudly -- signed by many intellectual luminaries of the time including "educator" John Dewey.
- In 1948, nine years before Sputnik, twenty-three years after Scopes, the Supreme Court struck down religious instruction in public schools.
So, while the Race for Space put godless evolutionism on afterburners, it was already making good headway without that.
44
posted on
04/16/2006 7:39:32 AM PDT
by
bvw
To: Conservative Texan Mom
After much early interest, I try to avoid crevo threads for that reason.
People need to pretty much agree to disagree and move on.
45
posted on
04/16/2006 8:51:52 AM PDT
by
MeanWestTexan
(Many at FR would respond to Christ "Darn right, I'll cast the first stone!")
To: MeanWestTexan
Thank you for that informative post. I'm adding it to my little library of useful posts and articles for future reference (and, if used on FR, you will be duly credited). Thanks again.
46
posted on
04/16/2006 11:23:16 AM PDT
by
Paddlefish
(Having the loudest instrument in the band doesn't make you the best player, or even a musician.)
To: dmz
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