Posted on 11/08/2009 12:10:22 PM PST by Schnucki
The teenage killers inspired by Charles Darwin's theories
The naturalist outraged the church, prompting a bitter debate that still sets creationists against evolutionists. Now a sinister link has emerged between his work and the recent spate of high-school killings by crazed, nihilistic teenagers
You wouldnt know from the celebrations of Charles Darwins life this year that the amiable Victorian gent portrayed in those TV drama-docs pottering around the garden of his home in Kent has been fingered as a racist, an apologist for genocide, and the inspiration of a string of psychopathic killers.
The Darwin double anniversary (2009 marks both the bicentenary of his birth and 150 years since the first publication of On the Origin of Species) has featured much vanilla hoopla: the Royal Mail issued commemorative stamps; Damien Hirst designed the dust jacket for a special edition of Darwins masterpiece; Bristol Zoo offered free admission to men with beards, and the Natural History Museum served pea soup made to a recipe devised by Darwins wife, Emma. The conclusion of dozens of lectures, articles and education packs for schools has been that Darwin wasnt just a brilliant scientist, but a thoroughly good egg.
With hardly a mention that his name has been associated with some of the most infamous crimes of modern history, it is as if there has been an unspoken agreement to accentuate the positive. Certainly, the milquetoast Darwin played by Paul Bettany in the recent film Creation provided little hint that there might be a dark side to the great mans bequest to posterity. The film focuses on Darwins inner conflicts in the years leading up to the publication of On the Origin of Species. The scientist is reluctant to make his ideas public, not because he has foreseen dire social consequences, but chiefly because he
(Excerpt) Read more at timesonline.co.uk ...
It’s called ignorance.
This was an article by a Brit reporter in the science section.
This just in! Mathematics was used by the Nazis! Thus, Archimedes was a Nazi!
>>Its called ignorance.<<
Not just ignorance. Willful ignorance.
You are just asking for a cat fight aren’t you.
It is true that the theories of Darwin are not, in the strict sense, reasons but rather excuses for these horrors; nonetheless they do provide a convenient philosophical foothold for proponents of these horrors. Science and philosophy are not easily divorced.
You know that is a good one and true, it sums up very well the posts about Darwin.
You are correct, although this ignorance stems from government education; this selective cognoscente filtering is deliberate in design.
>>You know that is a good one and true, it sums up very well the posts about Darwin.<<
Most anti-TToE (and especially anti-Darwin) posters haven’t met a logical fallacy they haven’t loved.
Be careful about what kind of corner you paint yourself into, bud.
The Nazis used mathematics to figure out how to get their bombs, ammunition, aircraft, etc. where they wanted them to be.
The Nazis did NOT use Darwinism in the same sense. Think about it.
Thanks for showing us your own ignorance.
If darwin was right, what have you got to worry about? Why the outrage and insults if you're guaranteed victory by evolution? Who can possibly harm you or your evolutionary progress? Is evolution somehow threatened by Christianity? :-D
>>Thanks for showing us your own ignorance.<<
Ad hominem is usually the first to be deployed.
Indeed you came forth with it first.
>>The Nazis did NOT use Darwinism in the same sense. Think about it.<<
Please reread my post for comprehension this time.
“...Archimedes was a Nazi...”
Cute, however a non-sequitur.
Don’t complain about attacks on your own character if you attack the character of others. Deal in that coin, get paid in that coin.
Ignorance, but whose?
The article, if you’d troubled to read it, quotes at length from teenage suicide-murderers who, themselves, attributed their actions to Darwin’s ideas, and quotes an 1881 letter from Darwin to a friend that jolly well sounds like he approved of ‘eugenic’ genocide.
That is a lame way of saying you made a non sequitur argument.
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