Posted on 12/14/2004 7:14:55 AM PST by wkdaysoff
HARRISBURG, Pa. The state American Civil Liberties Union (search) plans to file a federal lawsuit Tuesday against a Pennsylvania school district that is requiring students to learn about alternatives to the theory of evolution (search).
The ACLU said its lawsuit will be the first to challenge whether public schools should teach "intelligent design," which holds that the universe is so complex that it must have been created by some higher power....
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
How about a simple high school textbook
http://www.classzone.com/larson2000/geometry_demo/common/chapter3/applicl6.htm
While I admire the great faith of the evolutionists who accept the first five I object to having this religious propaganda included in with legitimate science at taxpayers expense.
You're either ignorant or a liar if you claim that the TOE in any way deals with the first 4 items on your list.
"darned if I'm going to have them taught creation myths"
And somehow you have concluded that baseless evolution myths are better?
Evolution is no myth. And entropy is not its foe.
If you can't accept the data to which I refer as supporting type 5., then there's really no point to further discussion, is there?
What did I tell you? Despite her protests that she's never been to that website, her answer is a mirror image of the false definition of evolution provided in "Big Daddy".
Source: Jack Chick's "Big Daddy". The dummy's textbook.
"I can't wait until the ACLU crashes and burns... "
And it can take it's sister organization the NEA with it.
RiW isn't the first creationist to use that claim in a dicussion forum. About six months ago, on a different forum, another creationist claimed that I was "ignorant" because I asked him to provide a citaton for an actual science text that made claim of these "six types of evolution". It leads me to believe that Hovind (who many suspect was the ghostwriter of Big Daddy) has made this claim appear in some popular creationist literature somewhere beyond Chick's lie-filled tract.
And it can take it's sister organization the NEA with it.
>>>
Perfect.
"Evolution is no myth"
The common definition of "myth";
"A usually traditional story of ostensibly historical events that serves to unfold part of the world view of a people or explain a practice, belief, or natural phenomenon."
The shoe fits nicely.
"And entropy is not its foe."
Has the Second law of thermodynamics been revised?
"Based on Intelligent Design "Theory," would you expect to find wasps in the fossil record before or after ants?"
Before. Because its just plain dumb to crawl when you can fly, so the intelligent designer, being intelligent, clearly created the flying thingies first.
No. Wait. It has to be after. Because the intelligent designer was just practicing with the crawling thingies, trying to get a grip on body design before tackling the flying stuff.
Or maybe this is a trick question.
Actually, evolution does explain in secular terms the origins of life. Our children are taught that a tiny piece of dust exploded in a big bang, random chemicals ended up on earth and mixed with fluid and made goo that was electified somehow and that chemically reacted goo is our great, great ancestor. Is this not a disservice to our children?
In order for evolution to work, the earth has to be zillions of years old, so again, it attempts to explain the origins of the universe, qualifying itself as a religion. No one is lying to you or anyone else.
Intelligent design is a scientific alternative to evolution. To be fair to our children, we can't give them a myopic view of the universe by institutionalizing only one theory that modern day scientists attribute to the origin of life. Intelligent design is published in scientific peer review journals and many prominent scientists will admit that its hard to explain life as being nothing more than a random mix of chemicals. If the chemical balance was off by just a little, or if the Earth was a few hundred feet further from the moon, there would be no life. The Big Bang theory does not provide the opportunity to see the "design" of the universe or its imperatives. That "clockwork precision" of events is science and required for life. As such, it should not be denied to our children or scoffed off because perhaps it may or may not have religious ramifications.
Macro evolution and ID are mutually exclusive concepts.
I'm speaking for myself here, but it is not the Creationists intent on teaching religious philosphy in public schools (although public schools happily require memorizing Islamic writings in 7th grade and no one complains). Creationists have many fine parochial schools to teach religious philosophy.
BTW, the ACLU is looking for a few good defenders.
They don't and it terrifies them.
Creationism is for those of weak faith.
Does "academic freedom" include teaching astrology and alchemy in science class too?
Until ID meets the qualifications I laid out earlier, it isn't scientific. It's just a fairy tale used to make lots of money for its proponents on the lecture and publishing circuit.
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