Posted on 06/13/2005 6:23:59 PM PDT by PatrickHenry
Evolution is an "age-old fairy tale," sometimes defended with "anti-God contempt and arrogance," according to a State Board of Education member involved in writing new science standards for Kansas' public schools.
A newsletter written by board member Connie Morris, of St. Francis, was circulating on Monday. In it, Morris criticized fellow board members, news organizations and scientists who defend evolution.
She called evolution "a theory in crisis" and headlined one section of her newsletter "The Evolutionists are in Panic Mode!"
"It is our goal to write the standards in such a way that clearly gives educators the right AND responsibility to present the criticism of Darwinism alongside the age-old fairy tale of evolution," Morris wrote.
Morris was one of three board members who last week endorsed proposed science standards designed to expose students to more criticism of evolution in the classroom. The other two were board Chairman Steve Abrams, of Arkansas City, and Kathy Martin, of Clay Center.
Morris was in Topeka for meetings at the state Department of Education's headquarters and wasn't available for interviews.
But her views weren't a surprise to Jack Krebs, vice president of Kansas Citizens for Science, an Oskaloosa educator.
"Her belief is in opposition to mainstream science," he said. "Mainstream science is a consensus view literally formed by tens of thousands people who literally studied these issues."
The entire board plans to review the three members' proposed standards Wednesday. The new standards - like the existing, evolution-friendly ones - determine how students in fourth, seventh and 10th grades are tested on science.
In 1999, the Kansas board deleted most references to evolution from the science standards. Elections the next year resulted in a less conservative board, which led to the current, evolution-friendly standards. Conservative Republicans recaptured the board's majority in 2004 elections.
The three board members had four days of hearings in May, during which witnesses criticized evolutionary theory that natural chemical processes may have created the first building blocks of life, that all life has descended from a common origin and that man and apes share a common ancestor. Evolution is attributed to 19th Century British scientist Charles Darwin.
Organizing the case against evolution were intelligent design advocates. Intelligent design says some features of the natural world are so complex and well-ordered that they are best explained by an intelligent cause.
In their proposed standards, the three board members said they took no position on intelligent design, but their work followed the suggestions of intelligent design advocates.
In her newsletter, Morris said she is a Christian who believes the account of creation in the Book of Genesis is literally true. She also acknowledged that many other Christians have no trouble reconciling faith and evolution.
"So be it," Morris wrote. "But the quandary exists when poor science - with anti-God contempt and arrogance - must insist that it has all the answers."
National and state science groups boycotted May's hearings before Morris and the other two board members, viewing them as rigged against evolution.
"They desperately need to withhold the fact that evolution is a theory in crisis and has been crumbling apart for years," Morris said.
But Krebs said Morris is repeating "standard creationist rhetoric."
"People have been saying evolution is a theory in crisis for 40 or 50 years," Krebs said. "Yet the scientific community has been strengthening evolution every year."
Don't know that one, sorry.
OOooo, Japanese please!
Long ago all the elements were mixed together with one germ of life. This germ began to mix things around and around until the heavier part sank and the lighter part rose. A muddy sea that covered the entire earth was created. From this ocean grew a green shoot. It grew and grew until it reached the clouds and there it was tranformed into a god. Soon this god grew lonely and it began to create other gods. The last two gods it made, Izanagi anf Izanami, were the most remarkable.
One day as they were walking along they looked down on the ocean and wondered what was beneath it. Izanagi thrust his staff into the waters and as he pulled it back up some clumps of mud fell back into the sea. They began to harden and grow until they became the islands of Japan.
The two descended to these islands and began to explore, each going in different directions. They created all kinds of plants. When they met again they decided to marry and have children to inhabit the land. The first child Izanami bore was a girl of radiant beauty. The gods decided she was too beautiful to live in Japan, so they put her up in the sky and she became the sun. Their second daughter, Tsuki-yami, became the moon and their third and unruly son, Sosano-wo, was sentenced to the sea, where he creates storms.
Later, their first child, Amaterasu, bore a son who became the emperor of Japan and all the emperors since then have claimed descent from him.
That is why some of the most respected and trumpeted evolutionists have now stated their belief in some requirement for intelligent design.
A challenge:
If we threw out all of the topics that are currently taught in science class, and only taught ID, what would be taught? Attack evolution? It doesn't exist anymore, it isn't taught. Attack the big bang? It isn't taught anymore either. So without these other topics around to attack, what does ID actually explain? What advancements could be made by understanding ID?
Is ID capable of standing on its own?
Proof that you do not understand evolution, it does not care how the first lifeforms came to be. You are confusing evolution with abiogensis.
No. ID exponents actually admit this. That's what the whole "teach the controversy" gambit is about. There's nothing to teach with regard to ID as a positive theory. In fact ID'ers themselves will admit that ID is not a scientific theory at all. It doesn't have any of the crucial features of a theory, most notably an explanatory mechanism or model. That's why it's a "proposal," an "inference," and etc, but never a "theory".
I'll point this out again. The new science standards proposed by the Kansas anti-evolutionists have apparently added to the prior science standards a claim that the theory of evolution covers abiogenesis. The old standards apparently (from what I can see) correctly made no such claim for the theory.
The false claim was added to the standards in order to call it into question and thereby undermine the theory (i.e., claim that the theory covers something it does not -- abiogenesis -- then call into question the evidence for the phony addition to the theory).
A great many posters here make the repeated argument that there is no (or insufficient) evidence of abiogenesis, and that the theory of evolution is therefore invalid. When it is pointed out that the theory does not cover abiogenesis, they then claim "oh, but the schools teach it as thought it does cover abiogenesis."
Well, it appears that the schools were not teaching any such thing -- until now. The deceit in this "movement" is beyond question.
"...The deceit in this "movement" is beyond question."
This is what disturbs me the most. Wrongheadedness is one thing, deliberate lying is another thing altogether.
Someone does not want the United States to perform well in the sciences. I really want to know why a fundamentalist Muslim was brought in as a credible witness for the anti-science side.
Revelation 4:11
See my profile for info
I took a look through the link that you provided and don't think that too many of those will be a problem. As a matter of fact, most are quite simple and obvious. However, it's simply not practical from a time perspective to spend the next year coming up with a reasoned response to each one of these - which by the way, didn't come from you in the first place. How be you let me know from your personal reading and examination of scriptures what falsifiable claim/statements you've found that you clearly believe has been demonstrated to be absolutely false and I'll have a go at that one?
Let me leave you with these two verses. Psalm 14:1 'The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God'..... If this describes your attitude, you're a fool. No, I didn't say it. Somebody who claims much greater authority than me did. The second verse is from 2 Peter 3:5 'For this they willingly are ignorant of, that by the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth standing out of the water and in the water:'..... We are looking at the same physical evidence of the universe around us but but it would seem you have interpreted it one way and I another. However, God claims elsewhere in scripture that he knows even a person's most innermost thoughts ......and what He is saying is that you are being 'willingly ignorant' of what you are looking at. That phrase transcends the idea of simple 'interpretation' of evidence. What the Bible says is that have resolved yourself to ignoring the obvious and have simply decided it's not true. Just to carry this one step further, scripture says that one day in the future we all have to stand in front of God and give an account of ourself. While the big issue there will not be another crevo debate, do you think your arguments will hold any water there that you were totally persuaded to believe something other than God creating the universe based on the preponderance of evidence that had been presented to you while you were alive?
By Larry B. Stammer, Times Staff Writer...............03/11/05
Charles Townes, the UC Berkeley professor who shared the 1964 Nobel Prize in physics for his work in quantum electronics and then startled the scientific world by suggesting that religion and science were converging, was awarded the $1.5-million Templeton Prize on Wednesday for progress in spiritual knowledge.
The prize, the proceeds of which Townes said he planned to largely donate to academic and religious institutions, recognized his groundbreaking and controversial leadership in the mid-1960s in bridging science and religion.
The co-inventor of the laser, Townes, 89, said no greater question faced humankind than discovering the purpose and meaning of life and why there was something rather than nothing in the cosmos.
Townes said that it was "extremely unlikely" that the laws of physics that led to life on Earth were accidental.
Some scientists, he conceded, had suggested that if there were an almost infinite number of universes, each with different laws, one of them was bound by chance to hit upon the right combination to support life. "I think one has to consider that seriously," Townes told The Times. But he said such an assumption could not currently be tested. Even if there were a multitude of universes, he said, we do not know why the laws of physics would vary from one universe to another.
In 1964, while a professor at Columbia University, Townes delivered a talk at Riverside Church in New York that became the basis for an article, "The Convergence of Science and Religion," which put him at odds with some scientists. In the article, Townes said science and religion should find common ground, noting "their differences are largely superficial, and the two become almost indistinguishable if we look at the real nature of each." When MIT published the article, a prominent alumnus threatened to break ties with the institution.
In a 1996 interview with The Times, Townes said that new findings in astronomy had opened people's minds to religion. Before the 1960s, the Big Bang was just an idea that was hotly debated. Today, there is so much evidence supporting the theory that most cosmologists take it for granted.
"The fact that the universe had a beginning is a very striking thing," Townes said. "How do you explain that unique event" without God?
Eugenie C. Scott
IOW, what do pictures have to do with a people's right to choose how they educate their children? Or Ad Hominem is a poor argument.
That's most likely because there is a greater and greater proportion of unbelievers in the scientific community every year.
I particularly like the picture sequence I saw a few years ago of a whale crawling out of the ocean onto dry land and sprouting legs, hooves and becoming a Holstein cow, but keeping its flat tail complete with flipper!
Sorry, it takes far too much faith for me to believe that one.
Great, so maybe God (or some other ID construct like an interdimensional computer) created DNA and the first lifeforms. Guess what, evolution still happened. I find it very suspect that ID'ers are having a hissy fit over evolution, but none of their objections have anything to do with evolution.
So I guess the bottom line is that you aren't up for the challenge presented to you?
Now why would a God who was all-powerful enough to have created something (in fact everything) from nothing want to bother with evolution? Doesn't make sense.
And as for your statement that 'evolution still happened' (and making some assumptions about exactly what you mean with this), no intelligent person would argue that change on a radical level isn't happening (past, present and future). What I would argue is that change does not equate to evolution.
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