David Harsanyi | April 1, 2009
Some time ago, a highly charged argument was set in motion. It pitted evolution against the Creation. One side of this debate relies on scientific inquiry, and the other relies on ancient mythological texts. That's my view. That's what I intend to teach my children.
Yet I have no interest in foisting this curriculum on your kids. Nor am I particularly distressed that a creationist theory may collide one day with the tiny eardrums of my precocious offspring.
Which brings me to the Texas Board of Education's recent landmark compromise between evolutionary science and related religious concerns in public-school textbooks.
The board cautiously crafted an arrangement that requires teachers to allow students to scrutinize "all sides" of the issue. This decision is widely seen as a win for pro-creationists—or wait, are they called anti-evolutionists?
"Texas has sent a clear message that evolution should be taught as a scientific theory open to critical scrutiny, not as a sacred dogma that can't be questioned," explained John West, who is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, which is an anti-... a Charles Darwin-hating group that argued that students in Texas should have a right to review "all of the evidence."
What damage is there in challenging assumptions and "dogma"? None, of course. We should be fostering critical thinking in our youth. Allowing an inquiry into evolution, I believe, will almost certainly confirm its existence in the minds of millions of children.
Next up: a critical analysis of the existence of God in public schools.
But there is a deeper problem here. Why are so many allegedly tolerant and science-loving Americans aghast at the notion that their beliefs will be scrutinized in schools? Are school systems reflections of the population's diverse viewpoints or places of political control? Should school boards shut down debate on a topic that millions of Americans still disagree on?
Until we jettison the antiquated one-size-fits-all public education system, the majority of students will endure some seemingly preposterous objections to fact, useless sex and/or abstinence programs, historical textbooks that are mockeries of history, and/or truly questionable science employed for ideological purposes.
Which one works? Which one is true? Which one is better? It's often a matter of perception and largely irrelevant. What do parents want their children taught—or, perhaps, which controversial ideological topic would they like to avoid—is the real question. Why should a 1-vote majority on a school board resolve an issue for an entire community?
I wish everyone believed in the overwhelming evidence of evolution, but that's not the case.
Not long ago, board members in Texas removed a textbook reference asserting that the universe is about 14 billion years old (based, I assume, on an episode of "Nova"), because the board's chairman believes that God created the universe less than 10,000 years ago (based, no doubt, on faith alone).
On the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin's birth, Gallup conducted a poll that showed only 39 percent of Americans say they "believe in the theory of evolution," while 25 percent of Americans say they do not believe in the theory. Thirty-six percent don't have an opinion. (My hope is that 36 percent does not have an opinion regarding evolution as I do not have an opinion about other indisputable scientific truths, such as osmosis and the yeti.)
The most sensible solution, of course, would be to permit parents a choice so that they can send their kids to schools that cater to any brand of nonsense they desire—outside of three core subjects.
The left never will allow any genuine choice in our school systems. So it seems highly disagreeable and political to trap kids in public schools and, at the same time, decide where schools fall on controversial issues.
To scrutinize "all sides" is no sin. And in the decidedly collective school systems we've set up for our diverse population, it's the best solution we could hope for.
David Harsanyi is a columnist at The Denver Post and the author of Nanny State. Visit his Web site at www.DavidHarsanyi.com.
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Why do I suspect this will become another one of the running yelling matches on H&R between atheists and the few religious folks willing to tolerate the vitriol that comes out against them here? Note I am not biased against either side here, but that debate is not the Harsanyi raises...
The best thing is probably for everyone to silence creationists with some good skullfuckings.
I would have no problems with this as long as kids are being taught the difference between a theory and a hypothesis.
Central control of curriculae is something that all intelligent
people support.
Lysenko is the exception, rather than the rule.
Not all religious folks are anti-evolution, just so you know.
Why they keep insisting that a document created by nomadic people
thousands of years ago should be taken as absolute scientific fact
escapes me. But I will say there are some on the evolution side who
are pretty dogmatic about it, in the "I'm absolutely right and to
question me is heresy" way.
Note: I disagree with the use of the word "believe" in the same
sentence as the word "theory," but that's just me being
pedantic.
Anyone who disagrees that we need a good tzar in charge of
educating The Children probably hates The Children.
You were raised correctly... why do you think that bad parents
should be free to raise their The Children incorrectly?
Should The Children really be allowed to be abused by Christianist
parents by being taught an age of the planet different than the
scientific consensus?
What about The Children?
I think we'll have true educational choice in this country when
we teach all theories of the causes of the Great Depression and
whether or not the New Deal helped or harmed the country.
That'll be a bigger fight than creation vs. evolution, a battle
that should have been settled with the Scopes Monkey trial.
So which creation story gets its equal time with the biological theory of evolution? There are countless myths from a vast array of cultures to choose from. Should we really spend time on ALL of them? I have no problem with kids learning about creation stories, but they belong in a philosophy or history class and NOT a science class. There has to be some focus and in science that focus should be firmly on materialism. To start down the road of metaphysics is an invitation to a nebulous cloud of "belief". Science is about what you can believe. It's about what you can demonstrate and repeat. And that doesn't even begin to touch on the first amendment problems with all of these ID proposals.
Preferred solution - educational vouchers redeemable by any
school, including the one in your home, for K-12
education.
Until that glorious day in education funding arrives, creationism
(not very intelligent design if you prefer), like phlogiston, the
geocentic solar system and other incorrect hypotheses should only
be taught in order to to thoroughly debunk them.
I have a problem, no because teaching creationism is EVAL!!! or
something, but because teaching creationism as science undermines
the true idea of science, namely conclusions arrived at through
facts and observable experement.
If kids learn that science=faith, they'll never fully grasp how
logic works, and the last thing we need in this country are more
future voters with no sense of logic.
Religion or not, the assault on reality is the troublesome
aspect...
Ok, how about this: dismantle public education, let schools teach what they want, and parents can vote with their dollars. EASY.
I agree with David Harsanyi in principle, but am very worried
about the side effects. There is no doubt that when presented in a
scientific manner, the science overwhelmingly supports evolution.
And while it might be educational for kids to see just how foolish
creationism is, doesn't teaching of nonscience in science classes
open a large and dangerous door?
Do we let the flat earthers in? Do we let in the folk who don't
believe in modern medicine?
As long as we have a public school system teaching science,
shouldn't it teach science in science classes?
Public or private, schools deliberately lying to children should be considered abuse of some kind.
I agree that we should teach the controversy.
http://controversy.wearscience.com/
Yeah, Tony. Parents who talk about Santa Claus should be dragged off to jail, too. They should shut down the mall near my office 'cause they've got an Easter Bunny!
Ok, how about this: dismantle public education, let schools
teach what they want, and parents can vote with their dollars.
EASY.
As long as we don't make anti-discrimination laws requiring
companies to hire kids from schools that teach non-science. Faith
based engineering is not a good idea.
When schools taught Darwinian rather than Punctuated
Equilibrium, was that abuse? Or since children were only
accidentally taught lies rather than deliberately, should we be
more sympathetic?
Personally, I'd rather deal with the downsides of local control of
curriculae than the downsides of central control.
I'm find with this. As long as all students must take a class to discuss "all sides" of religion.
As long as we don't make anti-discrimination laws requiring
companies to hire kids from schools that teach
non-science.
Companies can hire whomever is the best fit for the job.
Central control of curriculae is something that all
intelligent people support.
Really? I would have thought that having the parents decide would
be a better way.
I mean, central control of religion might be more intelligent too,
right?
I think we'll have true educational choice in this country when
we teach all theories of the causes of the Great Depression and
whether or not the New Deal helped or harmed the
country.
Amen
What Wombat said...
Plus, ALL creation myths and POV's (non-religious flat earthers,
etc) would have to be given equal time. And remember that the
number of religions is not fixed, but ever-expanding.
Yeah, Tony. Parents who talk about Santa Claus should be
dragged off to jail, too. They should shut down the mall near my
office 'cause they've got an Easter Bunny!
Parent are allowed to tell their kids what they want (barring
abuse, etc.) if a mall was telling kids the Easter Bunny was
scientific fact, I'd... well, I'd not go to that mall...
We need central control to make sure that all creation myths are
taught! It's all about fairness.
If we don't teach the whole "pooped out" theory, we're
discriminating against that one tribe of aboriginals, even if they
aren't in the classroom!
Remember, education is a public good which is why parents shouldn't
have a say.
You know, like the fire department.
The problem with science in the K-12 system, is much of it is
taught as "take it on faith, that what I teach is true." I don't
remember ANY experiments in HS that demonstrated the Big Bang
theory or evolution, or the many other science subjects. You just
read the book, or listen to the lecture, and took a test on how
well you memorized the subject. So of course, some will question
why one couldn't teach creationism the same way. Until you get to
college level courses, most science is just "take it on faith that
it is true."
What is kind of funny, is in all my K-12 education, I think at most
a total of 1 hour was spent on evolution. So it seems so ridiculous
that so much anger is vented over the relatively little amount that
is spent covering it.
As long as all students must take a class to discuss "all
sides" of religion.
Actually, this is the perfect arguement againsts creationists,
because the only responses are:
Yes, which is the only respose in line with the claim of
"presenting all sides" or...
No, which exposes the true agenda of these luddite mini-tyrants
driving minivans with Jesus-fish decals...
The only problem with teaching creation in science class is that it isn't science. Once you're over that hurdle, everything is fair game. Should we be teaching children about the immune system without equal time for snake charming? Why aren't we teaching Dianetics? How can we let our children not contemplate reincarnation in this debate?
David H. - The problem is that there is no debate. Creationists
want to create a debate, create a controversy, thus creating doubt.
All of the "evidence" they use is shoddy at best, outright lies at
worse. There are thousands of transitional fossils, they say there
are none - outright lie, go to any natural history museum.
Creationists start from the bible and move outward from there,
squeezing fact in to biblical assumption about the age of the earth
and the role their god played in it. It has no business whatsoever
being discussed in a science class. Even calling it pseudo science
gives it too much credit. It is a religiously driven lie concocted
to arouse confusion in young minds and obscure them from learning
the truth: That the multitude of evidence that science can provide
demonstrates that the bible is flat out WRONG. They fear that if
creation is accepted as wrong, so follows every other part of the
book.
This is not a matter of let's debate a new scientific theory called
"intelligent design," it's about intellectual and scientific
honesty and integrity. If you want your kids to learn this drivel,
you should be allowed to send them to a place where religion is
taught...at a parochial school. And you can do this now! But please
don't confuse creationist theory with actual scientific rigor. That
is exactly what these liars want.
I am surprised that no one has pointed out that if one wishes to teach one's children that the universe is only 6000 years old, one is free to move to Somalia.
When schools taught Darwinian rather than Punctuated
Equilibrium, was that abuse? Or since children were only
accidentally taught lies rather than deliberately, should we be
more sympathetic?
Nice troll, Jaybird. However, incrementalism ("Darwinian") and
punctuated equilibrium both rely on the same set of observable
facts (fossil record, speciation), and the same basic mechanism
(natural selection). Only the details differ. Punctuated
Equilibrium is AFAIK still a hypothesis, but is gaining
acceptance.
I realize that the shifting terrain makes true believers
uncomfortable for many reasons.
Published in the August 2003 Humanist Inquirer
The Intellectual Chaos of "Intelligent Design"
by Barry Loberfeld
Good God, ID just won't go away! ID, of course, being "intelligent
design," the creationist concept that nowadays seems to be leaping
out at me from everything I watch, listen to, and read. An example
of the last is the April 14, 2003 New York Times review of
Intelligent Design Creationism and Its Critics: Philosophical,
Theological, and Scientific Perspectives (ed. Robert T.Pennock, MIT
Press). Near its end, the piece (by Jim Holt, who "writes a column
about philosophy and science for Slate.com") attempts to refute ID
with the counter-concept of "not intelligent design." To quote at
length:
"If nature were fashioned by a hands-on Divine Artificer, it ought
to exhibit a certain elegance and efficiency. Then what of all the
imperfections we see in the biological world? Why are organisms
burdened with ill-adaptive features like the webbed feet of the
frigate bird, which does not need them for paddling? Why is our
genome littered with nonfunctional junk DNA? Why have 99.99 percent
of the species that have ever existed gone extinct including the
poor dinosaurs, created only to be wiped out by an errant asteroid?
As [Stephen Jay] Gould remarks, 'Odd arrangements and funny
solutions are the proof of evolution -- paths that a sensible God
would never tread but that a natural process, constrained by
history, follows perforce.'"
Ironically, whether it is the result of divine direction or just a
natural development, a creationist rebuttal has come along in the
form of Cornelius G. Hunter's Darwin's God: Evolution and the
Problem of Evil (Brazos Press). A cover blurb by Michael Behe (!)
ably summarizes the book's thesis that the "main supporting pole of
the Darwinian tent has always been a theological assertion: 'God
wouldn't have done it that way.' Rather than demonstrating that
evolution is capable of the wonders they attribute to it,
Darwinists rely on a man-made version of God to argue that He never
would have made life with the particular suite of features we
observe." In other words, if the frigate bird has weird feet, it
means only that that (for whatever reason) is the design. Those
feet no more disprove the existence of a Creator than the Mona
Lisa's queer smile disproves the existence of a painter. (We'll put
aside the question of whether creationists themselves will ever get
around to "demonstrating that [the Intelligent Design entity] is
capable of the wonders they attribute to it.")
Hunter (who is "currently completing a Ph.D. in biophysics at the
University of Illinois") may very well have been aiming at "not
intelligent design," but his argument backfires -- fatally. It is
nothing less than a total obliteration of the concept of "design."
The standard form of the challenge -- If you were walking along a
beach and you found a watch in the sand, etc. -- drew its
rhetorical force from the distinction between the man-made watch
and the naturally-produced sand. But if now both the watch and the
sand -- the complex and the simple, the efficient and the
inefficient -- evince "design," then just what the heck does that
term mean? What could possibly constitute non-design? Mr. Hunter
has made "intelligent design" worse than unfalsifiable -- it is now
irreversibly indefinable.
As scientists know, not all changes in a species further its
evolution. This most recent development of creationism is a
maladaptive mutation that cannot help but lead to extinction.
Why are so many allegedly tolerant and science-loving
Americans aghast at the notion that their beliefs will be
scrutinized in schools?
A
G
W
What Lamar and E.S. said.
The creationists and IDers have no interest in debate as the author
of the article understands it. The law is not intended by its
proponents to foster debate as the author of the article
understands it. The law will not in fact foster debate as the
author of the article understands it.
"What is kind of funny, is in all my K-12 education, I think at
most a total of 1 hour was spent on evolution."
How much time is spent teaching evolution? When I went to HS back
in the 60's I too received about an hour on it.
Tonio, my problem with Special Creation/Intelligent Design are
legion.
However, they still are a molehill in comparison to the mountain
that is central control of curriculae.
This whole "we have to make sure that The Children are taught The
Truth" reminds me of the whole "we have to save their souls" thing
that previous generations had going on.
Allowing The Children to go to Hell would be abuse. Eternal! Why,
we even have a consensus.
What is kind of funny, is in all my K-12 education, I think
at most a total of 1 hour was spent on evolution. So it seems so
ridiculous that so much anger is vented over the relatively little
amount that is spent covering it.
Either you didn't take biology, or your school system was so
terrorized by the fundies that it didn't really teach
biology.
Companies can hire whomever is the best fit for the
job.
Uh-huh. The government would never put any restrictions on
who can be hired and what wages they are paid.
Wasn't Obama's first official act to sign the fair wage
bill?
Uh-huh. The government would never put any restrictions on
who can be hired and what wages they are paid.
Yeah, yeah. But i'd sure like for my scenario to be
true.
I'd also like a pony and a billion dollars.
Now, what we need to do, is put together an army and invade Iran
and make sure that Iranian children aren't taught that Muslim
Creation bullshit.
To allow Iranian children to be taught that crap is abuse!
...
I assume that you "central control" supporters see at least one
problem with the above scenario. Good. So do I.
Now please understand when I say that I see kids in Mississippi on
the same level as kids in Iran and think that, if their local
boards want to teach some stupid Islamic bullshit, they should be
allowed to.
Hey, if the parents in Mississippi want their kids taught something
else, they can move, after all. Maybe homeschool.
Jaybird,
[channeling MNG]
Where would you rather live, Mississippi, Iran or Gaza?
[/channeling MNG]
I would only want to live in Mississippi if it was centrally
controlled by people hundreds or thousands of miles away who knew
best what me and mine needed from government services.
Thankfully, Iran and Gaza already have stuff like that in
place.
If the people there don't like it, they can move to Somalia.
Calling for an end to public schools for the sake of freedom is
reasonable. Calling for
Creationism/ID/Astrology/whateverotherreligiosuperstition to be
taught in public schools is not. There is simply no debate in the
scientific community as to the validity of geology, cosmology,
evolutionary biology, or radiochemistry, all of which would have to
be invalid for creationism to work. That's about as debated as the
idea that Tesla was about to invent majickal free energies from the
aether.
The Discovery Institute is about as scientific as the Ghost Hunters
(who aren't at all scientific, for those playing along at home).
And just because it's kinda unfree for the government to control
what schools teach, doesn't mean that we should let the government
teach bullshit. You don't like public schools, fine, argue that
public schools are bad. But don't argue for allowing hard-core
Christians to force their religious beliefs on everyone else.
I am not for allowing hard-core Christians to force their
religious beliefs on everyone else.
I am, however, for allowing them to force them on their community
if they can get a majority there.
Rest assured, however: I also support your right to have the
bleeding edge of science taught in your school if you can get a
majority of like-minded individuals there.
If the local school is not teaching Lysenkoism the way you know, in
your heart, it should... you should move to someplace that teaches
it. I don't see how calling Dear Leader and having teachers purged
from the school for teaching other than what The Education Tzar has
decided is appropriate is better than local control.
I just don't.
Maybe I'm naive or dense, but which Christian denominations are the ones that believe the earth is 6,000 years old?
Ska,
Any of the literalists. The 6,000 number is an approximation based
around adding up the "begats" in the Old Testament and some other
internal evidence. The Hebrew calendar also uses the first day of
Creation as "Day One." In the Hebrew calendar, 2009 is 5769.
Should we be focusing on teaching the controversy of whether Christian's believe the Earth is 6,000 years old or not?
My teenage son said that any kid, or teacher for that matter, that talks outside of church about his Sunday School lessons is treated as a laughingstock by the other kids. Subjecting religious kids to ridicule just may be the fastest way to cure them - sort of like a 12 year old earnestly claiming that Santa Claus really exists.
Alright. I went to Catholic school. We were taught evolution. It's pretty strange that they want to teach Genesis as science in public school.
Ska,
The Wiki article on Young Earth creationism discusses Biblical
dating fairly clearly and talks about denominations.
The problem is not the encouragement to students to consider all
sides of an issue - in fact, that's always a good thing to do. Not
just in science, but in life in general: always critically consider
the evidence.
The trouble is singling out biological evolution for this
treatment, leaving the rest of science as it was. This invites the
notion that biological evolution is "just a theory" and is quite
controversial and only accepted by a subgroup of scientists,
whereas the other material they cover (behavior of gases, Newton's
laws, electromagnetism, the Bohr model of the atom, and so on) are
not controversial at all.
It makes people think evolution is "different" from the rest of
science, which is absolutely not the case.
(There's also an epistemological error in talking about scientific
theories as "just being theories," but that's a more subtle issue,
and secondary to the one above: very few people actually know what
a theory really is in the scientific sense, particularly vis a vis
Popper and falsifiability.)
I would only want to live in Mississippi if it was centrally
controlled by people hundreds or thousands of miles away who knew
best what me and mine needed from government services.
One man's sarcasm is another man's truth...
The prediction that the sun will come up tomorrow is "just a theory" in the same sense that evolution is "just a theory".
If your theory is so weak that it cannot hold up in the presence
of alternatives being taught in public schools, then perhaps it's
not so strong after all. Regardless of whether it's evolution or
intelligent design.
Dogma has no place in science.
Can someone please direct me to some good books and/or websites
that you feel offer the difinitive proof that man has evolved from
monkey (or whatever)?
I am not interested in disprovals of creationism, but affirmative
proof of evolution between the species, specifically between monkey
(or whatever) and man.
Do we let the flat earthers in? Do we let in the folk who
don't believe in modern medicine?
I really don't see what's wrong with allowing teachers to present
the best arguments that the earth is flat, and contrast them with
the best arguments that the earth is round, and let the students
figure out which arguments are more persuasive. ("Modern medicine"
is a slightly more difficult case, because it isn't one thing but a
whole bunch of things. I'd be happy, for example to see schools
present the best arguments for the modern medical view that
homeopathy is an ineffective way to treat illness and then present
the best arguments for the opposing view that homeopathy works.
(Repeat with, e.g., effectiveness of laetrile treatment for cancer,
whether HIV causes AIDS, whether HFCS is more harmful than table
sugar, whether smoking cigarettes causes cancer, or your favorite
other dispute between the views of "modern medicine" and the
alternative.))
When it comes to evolution, on the other hand, schools seem to want
to fall back on the argument from authority. ("The best scientists
all agree, so you should too.") They are particularly reluctant to
concede that some of the arguments against evolution are actually
arguments that the theory is scientifically implausible, not
arguments based on a "creation story." For example, Michael Dembski
argues that there simply hasn't been enough time since life emerged
on earth (considerably more than 10,000 years ago, by the way) for
enough random mutations and the winnowing process of natural
selection to have brought about the range of species we see today.
That is not a religious argument, but a scientific (or
mathematical, if you prefer) one. It may be a bad argument, but if
it is, then it ought to be refuted scientifically, not dismissed as
unworthy of scientific discussion.
The creationism vs. evolution is just two religions in collision. Science is the new religion. David Harsanyi talks about "believing" in evolution. Not so much different than believing in the Bible. The only real science is Engineering, in other words, cold hard practical applied science. The rest is speculation. I don't think either side knows the origin of life. And I think a child can be just as successful and happy in life believing in evolution or creationism. It's just not that relevant. How about teaching children how to think and evaluate and reason for themselves, then let them decide?
Let's just do away with all standards of education in the
name of freedom.
If the standards are controlled by creationists, why would you be
against this?
The problem with centralized control of cirriculum is that whoever
controls the school board gets to decide what EVERYONE's children
are taught.
Why not just have a private rating system for schools, and let
parents choose where to send their kids. Schools with bad
reputations will have trouble placing their graduates at good
universities. Just like how it works for higher education in the
job market - where people are free to choose the university they go
to and the curriculum is not centrally controlled by the federal
government.
Maybe I'm naive or dense, but which Christian denominations are the ones that believe the earth is 6,000 years old?
To expand on SugarFree's comment, the adding up was done by an
Irish bishop named Ussher in the
17th-century.
It is not as some creationists, who are probably totally unaware of
its origins*, "in the Bible". Other authorities have made different
interpretations but Ussher's is the most famous.
As to a debate, what's the point?
If believers cannot teach their offspring that God made the world
and to remember that the teacher is just teaching the works of the
devil and to pay it no mind I can't see where it's the states
business to do so. My preference would be to simply remove biology
from the compulsary part of the curriculum.
*And would likely be alarmed if they were. Imagine, accepting the
teachings of an Anglican Priest. Those guys are near as bad as
Catholics and he was probably gay to boot. :)
"Can someone please direct me to some good books and/or
websites that you feel offer the definitive proof that man has
evolved from monkey.
Is it your understanding that 'theories' are subject to "definitive
proof"?
The prediction that the sun will come up tomorrow is "just a
theory" in the same sense that evolution is "just a
theory".
Really? I've observed the sun coming up every new day for several
years now and am thus pretty well persuaded of the theory that the
sun will rise again tomorrow. So I guess you've observed a new
species emerge through natural selection every day, and that after
enough days, you've seen new genuses, families, orders, classes,
and phylums emerge, so that now you are persuaded of the theory of
evolution? That's pretty cool.
I have it on good authority that we are all living in a computer
simulation and our universe was created 4 milliseconds ago.
At least that's what I'm teaching my kids.
"Really?
Yes, really. You take all of your observation data to come up with
a theory. You test that theory. Where your post fails is that you
fail to distinguish between a theory with reliable inputs and well
founded conclusions with a theory with less reliable inputs and
fluid conclusions. In short, your post indicates that you simply
don't know what a theory is. Or possibly, you just don't give a
f*ck because you think you're right about everything.
if a mall was telling kids the Easter Bunny was scientific
fact, I'd... well, I'd not go to that mall...
Even if the shops there offered better goods at lower prices than
the competition?
Seamus | April 1, 2009, 2:47pm
The problem is that there really isn't time for those speculations.
The purpose of primary and secondary education is to cram students
heads full of as many universally accepted facts as possible.
At one time it was assumed that people lived in homogenous
societies where few differences of opinion existed over what was
the truth when it came to what needed to be taught to children in
schools.
The French and the Germans still believe this, hence no
controversies about streaming some students into vocational
training and some into college prep at ages as low as ten and
twelve years old.
The notion that some children of the "working class" may want to
escape their roots but might not understand it at that young age
(and get no encouragement from their parents to do so) does not
occur to anyone.
I tend to favor a more flexible approach to education, but it is
unlikely that a government bureaucracy will provide it.
The only real science is Engineering
*sigh*
I don't even know why we try anymore. Anyone truly interested in
science has figured out by now that evolution is proven fact.
Anyone still skeptical of this PROVEN FACT is someone too stubborn
to be persuaded about anything.
A concise
WSJ article on the new Texas rules. It's absolutely
unfathomable that the board chairman's personal
belief that the Earth was created less than 10,000 years
ago influenced the board's decision to remove language on the age
of the Earth. I have no words for that.
I believe the central issue of this silly and confusing debate was
whether to delete the following 20-year-old language from Texas
high school biology standards:
The student is expected to analyze, review, and critique scientific explanations, including hypotheses and theories, as to their strengths and weaknesses using scientific evidence and information.
The revised standards had the following language:
The student is expected to analyze and evaluate scientific explanations using empirical evidence, logical reasoning, and experimental and observational testing
In January the board voted to uphold the revised standards. Fair
enough, but I hope there will still be room to debate strengths and
weaknesses of AGW theory as P Brooks mentioned. For sure, there is
no need to debate the weaknesses of evolutionary theory in general
(in a biology class rather than philosophy), but there are plenty
of ongoing debates between competing evolutionary theories.
Personally I don't see much of a difference between the two
standards, but apparently the former has been used by creationists
in the past to force ID into the classroom, and that's wrong. I had
trouble figuring out which standards Mr. Harsanyi was for,
though.
The real news here is troubling new language that was inserted into
the science standards at the last meeting. Students are now
expected to:
Analyze and evaluate the sufficiency or insufficiency of common ancestry to explain the sudden appearance, stasis and sequential nature of groups in the fossil record
and
analyze and evaluate scientific explanations concerning the complexity of the cell
This language is completely bogus. Common ancestry is a fact, and
you can debate incremental evolution vs. punctuated equilibrium
without bringing common descent into it. And there is already a
pretty good explanation for the complexity of the cell--the
"symbiotic hypothesis" I believe. Is there really any need to
evaluate this in a science class?
So, Tony, do actually any kind of background in science or are
you just going by what you understand to be "science" because
people you trust say it is so.
NTTAWWT
Oh and there was no word from Mr. Harsanyi on common descent and the complexity of the cell, but I guess his article was more on federalism than education.
http://www.reasons.org/about-us/faq
"Should we be focusing on teaching the controversy of whether
Christian's believe the Earth is 6,000 years old or not?"
Lamar, it's not in the spirit of Libertarianism to over generalize,
which is why I posted the link.
I'm a Bible believing Christian that agrees with the scientific
measurement of the age of the universe (~13.7 mil years old).
And yes, I'm against the fed/st governments defining marriage. Gays
and Pollies (if all parties are in agreement) should be free to
marry w/o gov't sanction.
I also believe in legalizing all drugs, prostitution/porn (the
consenting adult kind).
Along with being a Christian, I'm also a Libertarian, which the
same can be said of Ran Paul, whom I voted for (wrote-in).
-----------------------------------------
"If your theory is so weak that it cannot hold up in the presence
of alternatives being taught in public schools, then perhaps it's
not so strong after all. Regardless of whether it's evolution or
intelligent design.
Dogma has no place in science."
Brandybuck, you hit the nail on the head. I concur.
I have no fear of science, in fact I love it! It just saddens me to
see most Christians, misinterpreting Genesis leads one believing in
a 6,000 year old universe.
The Noah's Ark flood in Genesis was only a localized flood in the
Mesopotamian Plain, where humanity was centralized. Only today does
Global = Universal.
---------------------------------------------
Let's not forget that just because a person chooses to believe in a
6,000 uni, doesn't make him or her a bad person. Americans should
have the freedom to make bad choices, the freedom to fail, and the
freedom to believe in wrong ideas.
-----------------------------------------
"Creationism is no more crazy than Keynesian Economics."
In most simple terms, creationism is bringing matter into existence
from nothingness.
The only plausible theory for the beginning of the universe is the
Big Bang. If you can tell me what started the Big Bang then give
yourself a pat on the back.
http://www.reasons.org/resources/publications/facts-faith/2000issue03#big_bang_the_bible_taught_it_first
Kreel,
I've studied extensively on the subject of biology, enough to know
that any 7th grader with a sufficiently open mind can conclude that
evolution is the only successful explanation for the diversity of
life on Earth.
The creationists have lost this issue, now and for all time. They
aren't going to convince a single biologist that 150 years of
increasingly sophisticated research deserves to be summarily
dismissed in favor of a hypothesis for which there is zero
evidence.
The problem is that there really isn't time for those
speculations. The purpose of primary and secondary education is to
cram students heads full of as many universally accepted facts as
possible.
Ah, I see; when we say that we're trying to teach our children how
to think critically, we're really just bullshitting.
(Actually, I already knew that. I went to public school, after
all.)
I would settle for explaining the difference between evoluation
within species which has been proven, and evolution of species
which is still just a theory.
IE, we see dogs evolve over time becoming larger, and smaller
etc.
But... not once have we seen a dog evolve into a cat.
Kind of an important distiction IMHO.
not once have we seen a dog evolve into a cat.
And you will never see such a thing. That's not evolution. That's a
common misunderstanding of evolution.
New species arise when populations diverge over time. Dogs, cats,
humans, apes, trees, moss, E coli all share common ancestors at
certain points in time.
"Should we be focusing on teaching the controversy of
whether Christians believe the Earth is 6,000 years old or
not?"
Lamar, it's not in the spirit of Libertarianism to over generalize,
which is why I posted the link.
I was actually suggesting, in a poorly expressed way, that
Christianity has its own debate about human origins even without
science classes. PS. Your link was interesting.
Where can I find some of the scientific proof that you refer
to?
I've found Wikipedia is a good starting point for most inquiries on
mainstream topics. Googling "proof of evolution" and making sure
you find a reputable science source is also a handy thing to
do.
not once have we seen a dog evolve into a cat.
And you will never see such a thing. That's not evolution. That's a
common misunderstanding of evolution.
OK, change that to "not once have we seen a reptile evolve into a
bird."
Harsanyi assumes the creationists are acting out of a sincere desire to discover the truth. If there any creationists interested in sincere open debate, by all means let them into school. But what I see is that creationists are mostly duplicitous propagandists interested in pushing an agenda. I wouldn't want them in my school anymore than I would want LaRouche backers, Trotskyists or Scientologists. You know the old saying about being so open minded your brain falls out? That's Harsanyi.
"not once have we seen a reptile evolve into a
bird."
Go look at dinosaur physiology.
Shouldn't that billboard have Jesus, with whip and chair (and
lion dinosaur tamer's hat), subduing that critter?
OK, change that to "not once have we seen a reptile evolve
into a bird."
What do you think evolution is? One day a lizard is prowling around
and *poof* it's a bird? Or perhaps one of its eggs hatched into a
fully-formed bird?
What we do have are mountains of compelling DNA and fossil evidence
that indicate that birds and modern reptiles share a reptile-like
common ancestor.
Lamar @ 2:49:
I have just read on this site that evolution is a "PROVEN FACT"
(Tony @ 3:06) from someone who has "studied extensively on the
subject of biology" (Tony @ 3:24).
Are you calling BS on this and stating that evolution is not a
"PROVEN FACT" as stated above?
By the way, we can prove that the earth spins on its axis,
therefore the sun rising in the east is no longer a theory, its a
proof.
"not once have we seen a reptile evolve into a bird."
Go look at dinosaur physiology.
Looking at dinosaur physiology is not the same thing as seeing a
reptile evolve into a bird, any more than coming upon twisted
wreckage on the highway is the same thing as observing the crash.
You may be able to draw some pretty good conclusions about what
happened, but that isn't to say that you actually saw it happen.
(And those conclusions can be made even more confidently if you can
compare your observations of the wreckage to the results of
laboratory crash tests. Unfortunately, scientists haven't yet been
able to conduct analogous tests for evolution--you know, the ones
that show members of one phylum having descendents of a different
phylum.)
So I guess you've observed a new species emerge through
natural selection every day, and that after enough days, you've
seen new genuses, families, orders, classes, and phylums emerge, so
that now you are persuaded of the theory of evolution? That's
pretty cool.
Sigh. I'm sure you are aware of the clear evidence of genetic
changes caused by natural selection. Antibiotic resistant bacteria
and the peppered
moth are the most famous. There are also numerous instances of
observed speciation. See section 5 of this. As
you noted earlier, the fossil evidence and our knowledge of
mutation rates indicates that it takes a bit longer to get to past
speciation.
OK, change that to "not once have we seen a reptile evolve into
a bird."
Except that we have the fossils.
Keep you eyes closed. Don't look at the huge amount of genetic data
on species divergence. To pick something at random, don't read the
latest
Scientific American. It has an excellent article on color
blindness and how the genes spread for primate trichromaticism. The
isolation of new world and old world primates is in the
genes.
Ignore the cases of scientists guessing that intermediate species
will be found in certain strata and finding them. (Sorry no time to
find a link, but think of all the pre-human reamins found in
Africa).
The amount of data supporting evolution is huge. Creationists are
trying to level the Rocky Mountains with a toothpick.
It's as much of a proven fact as anything in science. The only
reason people are confused about this is because it directly
contradicts certain religious myths.
(I'd argue that a rotating Earth also contradicts parts of the
Bible, but that doesn't seem to be as important as the origin of
human beings.)
Tony @ 4:06
Wikipedia?! You have an extensive background in biology and you are
sending me to Wikipedia?
If you have "studied extensively" on the subject, surely you have a
good reference source that has laid out this "proven fact".
What we do have are mountains of compelling DNA and fossil
evidence that indicate that birds and modern reptiles share a
reptile-like common ancestor.
What we have is DNA and physiology that are sufficiently similar
that we conclude that reptiles and birds are related. What we don't
have is actual observation of reptiles evolving into birds. (And
what's this "reptile-like common ancestor"? Are you saying that
theropod dinosaurs weren't reptiles?)
convertable:
Too many to possibly cite adequately. If you were truly interested
in learning about the subject you'd go start researching it
yourself. I've read the Wiki article on evolution and it's as good
a starting place as any. It comes with citations if you want to dig
deeper into the subject.
OK, change that to "not once have we seen a reptile evolve
into a bird."
Except that we have the fossils.
The fossils don't show us reptiles evolving into birds. They show
us reptiles that in some ways resemble birds, and then birds that
in some ways resemble reptiles, and we conclude from this that the
latter evolved from the former. That's an inference, not an
observation.
"If I outsource my child's upbringing to the government, I want
it done the best way possible! If I just wanted the kid's brains
filled with any old bullshit, I'd do it myself!"
All snark aside, I have to admit that this point of view isn't
entirely without merit.
What we don't have is actual observation of reptiles
evolving into birds.
You can't really observe something that takes many millenia to
occur. We have observed speciation in less complex creatures (with
very short generations) such as bacteria and fruit flies.
The offspring of any individual will be the same species as the
parent. Over vast amounts of time and many generations you
will observe that a descendant of one creature may well be a
completely different species than that creature. That means at some
point there is an animal that is neither bird nor reptile--or
perhaps both (ever seen an ostrich?) and everything in between.
Species are in fact more-or-less arbitrary distinctions. Life
exists on a continuum.
(And what's this "reptile-like common ancestor"? Are you saying
that theropod dinosaurs weren't reptiles?)
Yeah that's what we call them. So yes birds evolved from reptiles,
if you like. I only used that phrasing because we divide classes of
species based on the current makeup of life's diversity. A platypus
is classified as a mammal but it's really a transitional species
between reptiles and mammals that happened to survive to the
present day.
Evolution is as much a fact as gravity.
Evolution is also as much a theory as gravity.
The theories are attempts to explain the mechanisms behind each
concept.
Evolution has been observed (repeatedly), as has gravity, thus both
are facts.
spyglass - evolution doesn't have anything to do with origins of
life
Seamus - unique prehistorical events aren't going to be observed,
but they can be inferred and strong conclusions drawn from
available empirical evidence, just as one can solve a murder in the
absence of eyewitnesses to the event
convertible creationist - try talkorigins.org and
pandasthumb.org
There are also numerous instances of observed speciation.
See section 5 of this. As you noted earlier, the fossil evidence
and our knowledge of mutation rates indicates that it takes a bit
longer to get to past speciation.
Observing that new species can emerge through natural selection
working upon genetic mutation and concluding that new classes,
orders, and phylums must be able to emerge through the same process
is like observing that I can increase my running speed from 5 mph
to 6 mph by daily practice and concluding that I must be able to
increase it to 7 mph by the same process (or, at my age, any
process at all).
Seamus - classes, orders, etc. have no objective definition. only species do, and not always. the macroevolution/ microevolution distinction is a false dichotomy which violates Occam's Razor.
Seamus - unique prehistorical events aren't going to be
observed, but they can be inferred and strong conclusions drawn
from available empirical evidence, just as one can solve a murder
in the absence of eyewitnesses to the event
No, but we are fairly confident in our ability to do so because
people *have* observed murders more or less like the one we are
investigating. And the farther a particular murder is unlike others
we (or other people) have actually observed, the less confident we
can be of any inference we draw from the evidence. (Rarely are we
faced with a murder as unlike one we have ever seen before as the
emergence of one biological class from another is unlike emergence
of one species from another (much less the emergence of
antibiotic-resistant bacteria of the same species).)
one class doesn't emerge from another in one big step, as you seem to think. They diverge from a common ancestor in a series of little steps.
It's a good thing DNA and fossil evidence provide enough
confirmation of the concept not to require us to wait around until
the invention of the time machine.
Not that it would do any good. Speciation doesn't happen in an
instant. But evolution is the most parsimonious explanation for the
diversity of species as observed on this planet. To say that it can
happen in small increments but not large ones over vastly more time
is to introduce an arbitrary limit that is not supported by the
facts. (which is pretty much what innominate said at 4:48)
Seamus - classes, orders, etc. have no objective definition.
only species do, and not always. the macroevolution/ microevolution
distinction is a false dichotomy which violates Occam's
Razor.
Fine. It's still a pretty big leap of faith to conclude that,
because we can see natural selection working to cause one species
of fruit fly to evolve into another, that the same process can
cause a water-dwelling, gill-breathing cold-blooded animal to
evolve into a land-dwelling cold-blooded animal, and that to evolve
further into a flying, feathered, warm-blooded animal. We see
fossils of those different kinds of animals and infer that one kind
evolved into another through genetic mutation, followed by the
winnowing process of natural selection, but we have never observed
that kind of change happening. We just conclude that it *must* have
happened that way, because frankly we can't think of any other way
to explain the limited evidence we can observe (no way, that is,
that doesn't take us down paths that we rule out ex ante, such as
special creation or intelligent design).
Tony,
In all fairness PART of my motivation here was to point out that a
large percentage, if not all, of those who in these comments will
typically mock the creationist for his believes has done absolutely
no individual research on the subject and has taken the
evolutionary (between species) science on, dare I say, faith.
I do have a legitimate interest in discovering proven evolutionary
facts and the sources I've been able to dig up leave far too many
questions to satisfy the proof that I think is demanded to say
"that settles it - there can be no dissent"
I am only interested in the proof that humans have evolved from
something else. Cave lizards devolping antennea in place of eyes
does nothing to further the proof of between species evolution as
it pertains to humans.
I am also not interested in those who think you can prove
evoluation by disproving items in the Bible. Good science will
stand on its own merits and disproving Biblical writings is
irrelevant.
What I shall do, and hopefully we can converse in other one of
these type of threads, is gather all of my questions and then
hopefully you can provide good sources/starting points for the
answers. This may take time (work,kids,life,etc.)
Hope to talk again soon
To the larger point of the article--I don't think it does anyone any good to let parents' prejudices influence their child's education on factual matters. Children coming out of school smarter than their parents should be a laudable goal.
To say that it can happen in small increments but not large
ones over vastly more time is to introduce an arbitrary limit that
is not supported by the facts.
To say that it can happen in small increments and therefore must be
able to happen over large ones is to make an extrapolation that is
not supported by the facts, and that may be no more valid that my
extrapolation, from the fact that by strenuous exercise I can
improve my running speed to 6 mph, to the conclusion that I must be
able to improve it to 7 mph the same way. In the absence of actual
observation, we are just guessing.
Seamus - your argument is more akin to saying that just because
I can't reach from one floor of a staircase to another floor in a
single step, then I also can't reach the next floor by a series of
small steps.
If birds aren't descended from dinosaur ancestors, explain why they
have the genes for producing teeth (albeit inactivated) which can
be turned on using biomolecular techniques.
convertable,
I think it's a fallacy to equate trusting in scientific consensus
with trusting in religious myths. Few if any people can comprehend
the entire scope of the science of evolution. One of science's
great strengths is its inevitable drive toward consensus and
coherence. It's possible that every biology text and authoritative
statement on evolution is part of a giant ruse, and that only
people who have actually dug up bones and looked in microscopes are
qualified to believe in it--but you don't apply that same standard
to anything else. Have you actually observed the earth rotating, or
do you just trust the authoritative people who told you it
does?
Even if we ignore the requirement for scientific explanations to be
parsimonious (humans are DNA-based lifeforms just like all others;
what evidence exists to suggest they may not have evolved just like
everything else did?), there is probably more hard evidence for
human evolution than almost any other species (given our particular
interest in our own species).
Seamus - your argument is more akin to saying that just
because I can't reach from one floor of a staircase to another
floor in a single step, then I also can't reach the next floor by a
series of small steps.
No, without actually observing the process, we can only guess
whether the emergence of birds is more like moving from one floor
to the next (or to the 10th floor) by small steps or more like
moving from a running speed of 5 mph to one of 7 mph by small
increments.
Seamus your argument is just another version of "we don't know
everything, therefore we know nothing."
You can't dismiss vast amounts of data just because we haven't
happened upon the data you want to see.
Is all cosmology bunk because we haven't observed the big bang?
As I've already stated, you can't directly observe unique events
in the past, but you can infer what happened from other evidence.
The most direct evidence is evidence from fossils. A large body of
circumstantial evidence which comports with predictions from
evolutionary theory is also available to support the conclusion
that birds descended from reptilian ancestors.
In fact, in the most modern, cladistic understanding of taxonomy,
birds are not a class separate from reptiles, but are a sub-taxon
of the reptiles. The reptiles as traditionally understood (snakes,
lizards, tuataras, amphisbaenids, crocodilians, turtles) do not
form a properly constructed monophyletic clade, instead they are a
paraphyletic grade.
I'm all in favor of questioning scientific theory and examining
alternatives, but time is limited, particularly in high school
science courses, and one has to prioritize what subjects will be
covered. When I teach biodiversity at the college, I discuss
Lamarckian inheritance since it is of historical evidence, even
though it is discredited.
In other words, Seamus, all science is is a collection of "best guesses." Not only is evolution the "best guess" for explaining the diversity of life, it's the only guess there is. There is not a single credible alternative "guess" that satisfies even the most basic principles of reason.
I am also not interested in those who think you can prove
evoluation [sic] by disproving items in the Bible.
In my experience, this form of argumentation is more frequently
true of literal creationists and ID proponents who provide no
evidence to support their assertions but instead merely attempt to
discredit evolutionary theory and act as though their views are a
viable alternative.
Most of the time evolutionary theory is taught so poorly that
one is left with the impression that life changes in the purely
linear sense as depicted in that famous 'Evolution of Man'
picture.
Evolutionary theory is really the story of a miniscule amount of
successes against billions of dead-end extinctions. There is no
single 'missing link'. Instead there are billions of failed
models.
This improper metaphor is the source of much confusion. Most of the
time I hear the faithful reject evolution it is clear that they
have a Lamarckian view of it not a Darwinian one.
Let's face it, most schools are so poor at teaching just about
everything adding evolution to the curricula is really adding one
more thing that most people will misunderstand and misapply in
their weltanschauung.
just reading through this thread one can see the
misunderstanding of evolution by much of the public. innominate one
is giving an excellent lecture.
I might add that their really aren't even species per se, only
populations. When you understand that, you're more likely to
understand evolution.
Again it is sadly poorly taught.
Theory of evolution and creationism are not two points of view! The former is science the latter is philosophy.
Not only is evolution the "best guess" for explaining the
diversity of life, it's the only guess there is. There is not a
single credible alternative "guess" that satisfies even the most
basic principles of reason.
Well, sure, if you put the rabbit in the hat by ruling out
alternative explanations ex ante.
convertable - You are being way too nice to Tony. He ratted out
his parents to Big Brother at a young age.
And to add onto innominate's point about fact vs. theory, gravity
IS both a fact and a theory. The fact of gravity has never been in
dispute, while Newton's theory of gravity has been
disproved/superseded by Einstein's theory of Relativity, although
it's still quite a useful theory. The attempts by the Texas Board
of Ed to teach "sufficiency or insufficiency" of the fossil record
are akin to showing a class a picture of an airplane flying and
asking them to discuss whether it refutes gravity.
Theory of evolution and creationism are not two points of
view! The former is science the latter is philosophy.
Philosophy isn't a point of view? What is it, then? A dessert
topping?
Seamus - Your "ex ante" friend is causing quite a lot of damage. Perhaps we can meet him and reason with him.
Theory of evolution and creationism are not two points of
view! The former is science the latter is philosophy.
I disagree. They are two falsifiable claims, and they are mutually
exclusive. But only one has any evidence in its favor.
The attempts by the Texas Board of Ed to teach "sufficiency
or insufficiency" of the fossil record are akin to showing a class
a picture of an airplane flying and asking them to discuss whether
it refutes gravity.
Actually, a fairly interesting question. To answer it, you have to
go into a fair amount of detail about what gravity really means and
about all the different forces working on physical objects. For
some reason, schools seem a lot more willing to go into that than
they are to deal with objections to evolution. (When that comes up,
you'd think the question was "What about pointed sticks?")
Well, sure, if you put the rabbit in the hat by ruling out
alternative explanations ex ante.
What alternative explanations? Ones that perhaps many people
believe, but which lack even the most rudimentary evidential
support? I'm saying every single observation in biology either
confirms the basic principle of evolution or adds nuance to our
understanding of it. Evolution is an observed fact. The theory of
evolution, like all theories, is constantly being improved upon.
Something would have to have impossibly extraordinary evidence in
its favor to refute it.
Until 'intelligent design' science produces a shred of useful hard science is it just another conspiracy/alternate history theory. The only difference between ID and any other quackery is that it's backed by religious institutions. If individuals want to teach their children ID, that's perfectly fine. They're also welcome to teach their children about the secret alien takeover of the world governments, the Illuminati, Atlantis, perpetual motion devices, or anything else they like as fact; hell, they might even be right about a few of them. It doesn't change the fact that you don't get to teach it in school until it's supported by substantial evidence. School is about teaching widely accepted mainstream theories. Sometimes, oftentimes even, what they teach is wrong; it's still a safer bet than giving equal time to every quack that comes along with crazy ideas that are not supported by available evidence.
The problem with this issue being discussed is that it goes away
if public schools go away and are replaced by private
schools.
The real issue here is; i.e. the existance of public schools and
even worse the fact that children are forced to attend these
schools.
Schools should go back to being private and this way they can teach
what they want using the funds given to them by their students and
private donars.
With public schools you wind up with a lot of problems including
the issue being written about in this article, something that
wouldn't be an issue if private schools replaced the public school
system.
The theory of evolution by natural selection is dogma? Like the
theory of relativity is dogma? WTF, Harsanyi?
I would definitely support teaching (in a social studies class) the
history of the fundamentalist response to Darwin, followed by a
unit on the philosophy of science, followed by one on comparative
religion. But simply "teaching the controversy" won't give the
fundie kids the intellectual tools they need to think this stuff
through.
"Schools should go back to being private and this way they can
teach what they want using the funds given to them by their
students and private donars."
Because look how well that served the general populace. I mean,
think of the literacy rate in Dickensian England!
And of course, if you were the member of some minority on some
issue or belief who did not have enough market power to have a
school that taught your beliefs where your job happens to be (which
is a great deal of folks), then you would indeed have this problem
in a private only system of schooling.
I completely agree with your aticle, Harsanyi. The modern theory of evolution will stand up fine to the scrutiny. Teaching the debate also is a great opportunity to teach students how to choose between competing theories based on the data.
Well, sure, if you put the rabbit in the hat by ruling out
alternative explanations ex ante.
Creationism is not an alternative explanation. It is an appeal to
authority. To go back to the car wreck analogy, the science of
evolution is the investigator measuring the length and angle of
skid marks, noting the location of the debris field, etc.
Creationism is asserting that Dr. Magneto was nearby, and decided
to use his mutated mental powers to yank the two cars together,
just for fun.
1. If the authorities had students learning the basics of
economics instead of fighting over this issue, then maybe we would
have some politicians now that have a clue.
2. If the theory of evolution posits survival of the fittest and
the fittest survive because the are able to adapt more readily to
their environment, then how come Caucasians don't have fur? I have
heard the theory that it's because of spending millions of years
fishing in the ocean, but that seems rather thin to me. I was
awfully cold last winter, and a nice fur coat would have helped me
survive. And wouldn't people never need sunscreen in Sweden?
For some reason, schools seem a lot more willing to go into
that than they are to deal with objections to evolution.
Could you please name some scientific objections to evolution?
For Seamus and Convertable, some excellent, informative
links:
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/section1.html#pred4
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-misconceptions.html#observe
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.html
If the theory of evolution posits survival of the fittest
and the fittest survive because the are able to adapt more readily
to their environment, then how come Caucasians don't have fur? I
have heard the theory that it's because of spending millions of
years fishing in the ocean, but that seems rather thin to me. I was
awfully cold last winter, and a nice fur coat would have helped me
survive. And wouldn't people never need sunscreen in
Sweden?
wow, that's some heavy ignorance.
the innominate one,
What's ignorant about it. Enlighten me. I don't pretend to know all
about this issue.
Since both are not science, how about we all agree on teaching either or. If the past was known it would be history. And since it is neither science nor history, the subject should fall to an elective philosophy class that is optional.
Like I said earlier most people don't understand evolution such
that their poor grasp of it doesn't hold up to their theological
tests.
It is poorly taught. Even 'survival of the fittest' is hugely
inaccurate. Evolution really is about accident and natural
selection.
I honestly don't think most people know the difference between
Lamarck and Darwin and I think more people think evolution in the
Lamarckian way.
I really think teaching biogeography in schools would help more
people understand evolutionary theories. And it wouldn't be
offensive to religious folks. It would plant the seed so to speak.
Before they know it they will be rethinking things.
Theology, not philosophy. Creationism should be taught in the Theology Dept.
It is interesting to note that Alfred Wallace, the co-founder of
speciation by natural selection, or evolution, believed in ghosts
and channeled spirits.
So Christians can still believe in angels and seraphims and demon
spirits. Wallace is proof that the two are compatible.
If the theory of evolution posits survival of the fittest
and the fittest survive because the are able to adapt more readily
to their environment, then how come Caucasians don't have fur? I
have heard the theory that it's because of spending millions of
years fishing in the ocean, but that seems rather thin to me. I was
awfully cold last winter, and a nice fur coat would have helped me
survive. And wouldn't people never need sunscreen in
Sweden?
Caucasians likely would have fur had they not started the practice
of wearing animal fur as they gradually migrated north, thus
eliminating the need to evolve their own built in fur coats.
With sunscreen, skin tones also lightened in order to better absorb
more sun, which they got less of the further north they moved. We
"need" sunscreen today because we spend too much time indoors and
don't have built-up natural tans, despite whatever our "starting
point" skin tone may be. In winter, tans would lessen to allow more
sun to be absorbed, and tans develop in summer to block more sun in
response to the greater amount and strength of sunlight. This is
the nutshell explanation.
...and as we all know, sunlight is necessary for the production of vitamin D, a vital nutrient. THAT is proof of human evolution!
...while we're talking about what belongs in the science classroom that is...
Evolution absolutely is observable under both natural and experimental conditions, george.
So which creation story gets its equal time with the
biological theory of evolution?
I'd vote for the greek myths. They're far more entertaining than
Torah.
-jcr
how come Caucasians don't have fur?
Because fur was a disadvantage in Africa where we evolved, and we
haven't lived in high latitudes long enough to get it back.
Oh, and as it happens, caucasians tend to have rather more body
hair than africans.
-jcr
Mr Harsanyi's comments are intellectually juvenile. This notion
that we should teach both sides is based on the flaw that there is
actually a scientific creationism. There is not. At all. ID is more
mytho-poetic crap pushed out by people whose theology is so weak
that they can't deal with the fact that perhaps a three thousand
year old Ugaritic campfire story AINT LITERAL TRUTH. ID is not
science. It proposes no experiments (which is what THEORY does in
science). Nothing would happen if ID were to become the dominant
theory. Because of this uselessness, this lack of empirical
content, ID is clearly not science. It is a mythopoetic redneck
fantasy. Exposing children to ID will one day be mocked as some
goofy American education experiment.
As for the notion that it is a good academic exercise to learn how
to discern between competing sides in a debate, how many college
educated Americans even know what Epistemology is? let alone high
school kids? With the amount of fully-baked conspiracy theories
running around out there, the idea that American students will even
begin to understand the complexities of falsifiability,
verifiability, correspondence and hierarchy is highly wishful
thinking. Philosophy of science is not the same thing as
Biology.
This op-ed piece is the equivalent of a bunch of
pseudo-intellectuals saying "well that's just your opinion". I
expect more from Reason. How pathetic libertarianism is becoming if
"choice" and "freedom" become hollow buzz words. Has the social
constructivism come to affect libertarianism as it has the Left and
the Neocons? Science is not just about opinions, or choice or
freedom. There are limits to action and limits in life.
Evolutionary Biology is the only method by which knowledge of the
natural world is accurately assessed and sorted. It has 150 years
of observation, hypothesis, and experiment to back it up. Those who
say otherwise are arrogant and ignorant. Period. There is no middle
ground.
And this is why government/taxpayer funded schools shouldn't exist in the first place.
The fossils don't show us reptiles evolving into birds.
Speak for yourself when you talk about "us reptiles" but this
thread certainly proves that some of us have evolved into bird
(brains)...
Schools could A) teach evolution, which provides a practical framework for understanding animal physiology through conserved mechanisms as well as being a good example of scientific reasoning or B) indulge a minority of americans by using teaching time to give a semblance of potential credibility to their cause. The second might be more equitable and fair, but the first actually succeeds in doing what the school should be doing.
Then why might as well teach communism in economics class. You
have to ignore less evidence that it doesn't make sense.
If I were in charge, they'd teach intelligent design, but it would
be taught in logic class. If you can't debunk it by the time you're
in 4th grade or so, you go to the remedial school.
Tony @ 5:25
I'm not sure you are still following the thread, but I just wanted
to give a quick response to your comments:
I'm not saying that only those who have dug up the bones and looked
in the microscopes are qualifed to believe in it, but if you are
going to state that it is an undisputable fact you should at least
know what exactly the evidence is.
And it is true that will not apply the same standard to
creationism. I recognize that creationism isn't science - it is
faith. It would be impossible to prove creationism, you either
believe or you don't.
But evolution is what must be scientific and what must prove
itself. If there are holes that does lead to a level of doubt.
Doubt means that other explanations could petentially be viable, if
not provable themselves.
"how come Caucasians don't have fur?
Because fur was a disadvantage in Africa where we evolved, and we
haven't lived in high latitudes long enough to get it back.
Oh, and as it happens, caucasians tend to have rather more body
hair than africans."
So there was time enough to turn the skin white, but not enough to
grow fur back? That does not make sense.
"Caucasians likely would have fur had they not started the
practice of wearing animal fur as they gradually migrated north,
thus eliminating the need to evolve their own built in fur
coats."
I am still confused. The DNA or genes or whatever which govern
reproduction were somehow aware they furry apes were wearing fur
coats so it slowly eliminated hair on out bodies? Wouldn't the
furriest of apes be warmer in northern climates, and therefore
reproduce more?
If it's such a disadvantage to have fur in Africa where man
evolved, how come the current primates in Africa have fur?
Judging from the answers I have gotten so far, I think there are a
lot of holes in the theory of evolution. It doesn't sound like any
absolute truth to me, comparable to gravity.
Convertable et al.:
In science, nothing is ever proven. It is always possible that
tomorrow data will be produced which fails to agree with a current
theory. So any scientific theory, no matter how many times it's
been tested, no matter how accurately its predictions have been
confirmed, is still subject to falsification, and then must be
modified or replaced by a new theory to explain the new data.
Theories can never be proven true. But they most certainly can be
proven false.
(It is also true, OTOH, that any theory proposed to replace the
existing one must not only explain the new data, but also explain
all the old data, or else it has "already" been falsified. For
theories which are supported by a mountain of evidence, tested many
times and/or to high degrees of precision, there are severe
constraints on what could eventually replace it. So it is
emphatically true that everything we know would never be "thrown
out," despite scientific popularizations indicating such; what does
happen is that modifications are made, and even after that, the old
theory still maintains its validity in regimes where its
predictions are valid - you can still make a damn fine airplane
using classical physics, despite knowing that classical physics
fails to generate valid predictions in certain limits such as high
velocity, strong gravitational fields, or at atomic scales.)
Anyway, the upshot of is that we shouldn't talk about "proving"
things because that never happens. We should talk about the amount
of evidence supporting a given theory (which also places
constraints on any alternative which could be proposed should the
existing theory someday be shown to be inconsistent with
experiment/observation).
Therefore, a more valid test of a scientific theory is whether it
is *falsifiable.* If I produce a theory which can be contorted to
explain any conceivable data whatsoever, that theory is
unscientific (think: Miss Cleo, Nostradamus, horoscopes).
Simply put, such a theory is not scientific because there is no
observable difference between a Universe where the theory is
correct and one where it is incorrect - in both Universes my
"theory," being so vague or flexible, can explain any conceivable
experimental result.
(That's not to say it's wrong; it could well be correct. But it's
not something that can be addressed by science, as science is about
observation of nature. It's material for something else -
philosophy, theology, or what have you.)
So what one must ask is, Is my theory falsifiable? Is there any
conceivable experimental result which would show my theory to be
false?
And creationism fails that test -- unless creationists can describe
a potential observation or experiment that can be done, with a
possible outcome that would convince them that creationism is false
and some alternative is needed.
i.e. "Perform the following experiment: ______ blah blah blah. If
the results of that experiment are ______ yadda yadda, then
creationism is proven false."
Can anyone provide an example of such an experiment?
Wow, a lot of comments on this one, lemme just get mine
in:
Does either sides argument really do anything to prepare children
for college and/or the working world? IMO, no. Neither needs to be
taught in public school, if your focus is on critical thinking,
there are many other subjects that can be used to exercise critical
thinking. Both sides are just trying to get their opinion pushed,
the atheists want everyone to be an atheist, and the dogmatists
want everyone to be a member of their religion. How about the gov't
does what they should do in every case and just STAY THE FUCK OUT
OF IT. Let parents teach their kids their beliefs if they believe
it is important that they children be knowledgeable in either or
any of the theories about the beginnings of human life.
Is all cosmology bunk because we haven't observed the big
bang?
We do observe the Cosmic Microwave Background, which is pretty
close.
Fine. It's still a pretty big leap of faith to conclude that,
because we can see natural selection working to cause one species
of fruit fly to evolve into another, that the same process can
cause a water-dwelling, gill-breathing cold-blooded animal to
evolve into a land-dwelling cold-blooded animal, and that to evolve
further into a flying, feathered, warm-blooded animal. We see
fossils of those different kinds of animals and infer that one kind
evolved into another through genetic mutation, followed by the
winnowing process of natural selection, but we have never observed
that kind of change happening. We just conclude that it *must* have
happened that way, because frankly we can't think of any other way
to explain the limited evidence we can observe (no way, that is,
that doesn't take us down paths that we rule out ex ante, such as
special creation or intelligent design).
Let's see, we have mountains of fossil evidence showing thousands
of animals that appear to have changed characteristics over long
time periods, indicating common ancestors to multiple species. We
have genetic evidence that maps to the fossil evidence. We have
numerous observations of speciation both in the lab and in nature
that provide a mechanism for this to happen.
We have clear examples of stupid design (misplaced optic
nerves, the appendix,
the genes in conflict with each other predicted by Dawkins,
subsequently found many, many times( such as
mitochodrial genes that cause male sterility, suppressed by nuclear
genes)), that are all easily explained by evolution. If a
designer was involved, it was a toddler on acid.
But, you want to fall back to special creation or intelligent
design. To quote Huxley, "I would rather be the offspring of two
apes than be a man and afraid to face the truth."
Hey Carston,
If this was about BELIEFS than fine, but it's not. It's about
science. And if you don't think science prepares children for the
world, then what world do you live in?
Science does indeed prepare children for the world, but unproven theories don't help anyone, they just contribute to controversy. Teach facts, not theories. If you want to study theories, you can choose to after you leave the government schools.
Carston:
There is no such thing as a proven theory. If you don't want
children taught theories in public schools, then we'll have to stop
teaching the germ theory of disease and the gene theory of
inheritance.
Theory doesn't have the same meaning in science as it does in the
vernacular. Neither does proof.
I am still confused. The DNA or genes or whatever which govern reproduction were somehow aware they furry apes were wearing fur coats so it slowly eliminated hair on out bodies? Wouldn't the furriest of apes be warmer in northern climates, and therefore reproduce more?
If it's such a disadvantage to have fur in Africa where man evolved, how come the current primates in Africa have fur?
Judging from the answers I have gotten so far, I think there are a lot of holes in the theory of evolution. It doesn't sound like any absolute truth to me, comparable to gravity.
You're actually making a common mistake with evolutionary theory.
Evolution has absolutely no predictive power about what will
happen. It is a mechanism for how change happens, not why. Even a
lot of scientists speak about evolution in terms of volition,
purpose, and causality (including even Dawkins), so it's not hard
to see why people are confused.
To answer your questions above, we don't know why any specific
hypothetical result doesn't happen for any of those. That is not
even a question that can be answered. All we can do is, after the
fact, point out that a given adaptation met a need. But that
adaptation did not arise to fulfill that need (something that
implies a purpose). It arose because whatever individuals had it
(or any of the steps leading up to it) were better able to survive
and reproduce.
This observation gets at your first question: DNA is aware of
nothing. Genes are aware of nothing. They don't need to be. If
caucasians wear coats that changes the environment within which
genes operate and obviates the adaptive value of certain changes
(like fur) so that they no longer convey a particular advantage.
The need for warmth has been met by other means (purpose-driven
actions in this case) so there is no pressure to make those
changes.
To turn to the second question: why apes have fur and humans don't.
Again, we don't know. All we know is that they don't. There are
loads of speculation having to do with bipedalism, but they are
just that: (informed) speculation. The only answer that can be
given is that lack of fur conveyed some reproductive advantage to
proto-humans along the way. That advantage could have been
something to do with cooling (per bipedalism hypotheses) or it
could have been that proto-humans thought those with less hair were
sexier than those with more and thus the ones with less hair
reproduced better. Your questions are like asking why chickens
don't have peacock tails. The answer to that question, from an
evolutionary perspective is the same: chickens were not subject to
the same pressures and maybe the jungle hens just didn't dig the
dudes with bigger tails. We don't know.
Ultimately your questions (or, I suspect, veiled arguments) really
don't address evolution at all because they are based in the wrong
premises. Of course you're going to find "holes" in evolution when
you are asking the wrong questions.
Ok, well then in general, don't teach theories, teach facts. The theories you are referring to are a little outside of what would be studied in high school, at least public ones. Like I said in the first place, both sides are just trying to get their opinion pushed/backed by the gov't, the atheists want everyone to be an atheist, and the dogmatists want everyone to be a member of their religion, the government shouldn't be backing either side by pushing an agenda in schools.
Ok...here is the thing. Everyone is forgetting that teachers
also have a degree control about what they teach within a
classroom. I remember that in HS I had a teacher that wanted to
teach both evolution and creationism. This was before it was even
an issue. We were given slips for our parents to sign. More than
half of the class had to go to another room when these lectures
took place. Some teachers did nto agree with her lesson plans but
could not do anything about it. If a teacher is part of a
Union...there is no way that anyone can make them teach something
they do not agree with. Before it even gets to the parents, we have
to take into account the teachers. Most would not approve of such a
curriculm and even though i am not familiar with others states, I
know that now, being presently an educator, there are certain
topics that cannot be enforced upon the educator to teach.
In keeping this in mind, I would love to teach both topics in a
classroom but lets be fair...most educators are not willing to part
with their personal beliefs for the sake of education. Even when
teaching Sex Ed. some educators impart personal beliefs upon their
students. I dont agree with this but it happens all too
often.
Students should be given the information to make informed decisions
for themselves period.
I should add too that your questions only make sense if you
assume that there is a "correct" answer to any given environmental
requirement. But nature doesn't work that way. There are hundreds
and thousands of possible solutions to most environmental problems.
Because of that evolution would be expected to produce multiple
solutions. Sometimes they will be largely similar (you need some
sorts of wings to fly) and other times they won't. So the the
assumption that because evolution doesn't produce result X each and
every time it is flawed is a fundamentally bad argument. Evolution
has "choices" (here using a metaphorical term since evolution
doesn't "choose" anything) between options A-Z, so to speak, and
any one of them is the correct answer. (That said, there are far
more wrong answers than there are right answers, which is why you'd
never find some combinations.)
I doubt that helps though since I really think you are willfully
playing a naive to try to advance your argument.
On human hairlessness:
Hair is a good place to find ticks and other parasites. Once humans
figured out how to build fires and wear furs, the warming advantage
of bodily fur is reduced, thereby opening up a selective advantage
for less hairy individuals with fewer parasites.
Scientists think this also led to sexual selection. Less hair was a
way to advertise health, i.e., fewer parasites, so hairlessness
becomes an attractive feature in mates.
Head hair no doubt offers the advantage of not getting your scalp
sunburnt, but is probably also a sexual cue. Pubic and underarm
hair probably got retained due to its role in enhancing the
exchange of pheromonal signals.
Differences in skin color have to do with available sunlight. In
the tropics there is a surplus, requiring protection in the form of
dark pigment. In the north, there is a shortage, so light skin
evolved to soak up more vitamin D.
We developed ways to stay warm using our intelligence (fire,
shelter, dead animal furs) likely before we moved out of the
African Velt to Northern Europe so we would not need to evolve to
become covered in fur to stay warm. We walked there quickly (a
human can walk thousands of miles in less than a year) but stayed
there for long enough to change skin pigmentation to cope with the
sunlight issue. So, while on the surface it would seem logical to
be hairy up north, it was unnecessary. It does not disprove
evolution. It just answers a question, which came first, people in
northern climates, or our ability to use tools to create
warmth?
Our intelligence has allowed us to live anywhere in the world. That
is where we have evolved the most. It is our great strength, but
also our downfall. We can build nuclear power generators, but we
also have over active imaginations that create deities out of thin
air. (Not yours, of course. Your deity is right...or you are easily
ruled by emotion.)
Untermensch @ 11:21 & 11:27am,
My boss thanks you for typing that so I didn't have to. ;-)
Ok, well then in general, don't teach theories, teach facts.
The theories you are referring to are a little outside of what
would be studied in high school, at least public ones.
Really? Public high schools don't teach that germs cause disease?
Public high schools don't teach that genes are the units of
inheritance? What's your basis for this assertion?
I've taught biology at a private Judeo-Christian high school using
state educational guidelines, at a public community college and at
two public universities for over ten years. I have a B.Sc. in
Biology and an M.S. in Biology. I'm working on a Ph.D. in Biology.
Therefore, I'm going to assert the authority of firsthand
experience in this area.
Teaching evolution IS teaching facts.
If your argument is don't teach theories, then biology classes in
high schools won't be teaching evolution, germs, or genetics.
Chemistry classes won't be teaching atomic theory. Have you ever
seen an atom? Physics courses won't cover gravity or the standard
model of particle physics.
convertable @ 8:41am
But evolution is what must be scientific and what must prove
itself. If there are holes that does lead to a level of doubt.
Doubt means that other explanations could petentially be viable, if
not provable themselves.
Scientists are always looking for improvements in their
explanations, this improves the predictive power of their theory.
As well, it can lead to fame and fortune.
They just aren't looking to creationism and "ID" as alternatives to
evolution. See, evolution explains why bacteria develop resistance
to antibiotics, and may even suggest solutions. Creationism? ID?
Not science, not an explanation, hence not useful.
@ the innominate one
Really? Public high schools don't teach that germs cause
disease? Public high schools don't teach that genes are the units
of inheritance? What's your basis for this assertion?
You are completely mischaracterizing what I said. Yes they teach
that germs cause disease, that is something very basic gone over in
elementary health classes, and the genes/inheritance thing we went
over in freshman biology (although I don't see it as pertinent to
being a functional member of society). My basis for these
assertions, I graduated from my public high school five years ago,
nothing taught in the realm of genetics or germs was referred to as
a theory.
My opinion, biology classes do nothing to prepare people for their
future, (to me it was just a lot of useless memorization, not
actually learning anything) unless their future is in biology,
students can choose to get into that after high school if they
want.
Teaching evolution IS teaching facts.
If its a fact, why is it called the "Theory of Evolution" and not
the "Fact of Evolution" , or just plainly, "Evolution"?
I see chemistry and physics the same way I see biology, if you are
into it, good for you, go study it, otherwise, there is no purpose
in forcing it on students who will either choose something to study
in college, or take a job out of high school where this knowledge
will never serve a purpose.
I took some physics classes in college because I found it
interesting, so I studied its theories. Everyone should have this
available to them, no one in a public school setting should have
theories shoved down their throat, either from god-fearing
dogmatist, or science-loving atheist.
If its a fact, why is it called the "Theory of Evolution"
and not the "Fact of Evolution" , or just plainly,
"Evolution"?
Understanding the semantics involved here is pertinent to being
a functional member of society. You apparently skipped school
that day.
@ jasa
I understand the semantics, I was being partially sarcastic due to
the fact that this is a retarded argument, at least for what are
supposed to be self-described libertarians. The whole aspect of
choice and freedom is taken out of the equation I guess when you
have paternalist trying to make everyone believe what they believe,
as always, for their own good.
In short, lets leave it up to parents and students. This is going
to be very difficult since we decided to go down the road of
government run schools in the first place, but hey, lets at least
try to leave it up to people to decide for themselves.
In short, lets leave it up to parents and
students.
This is the more interesting discussion. For myself, having HS
education treated as an all elective exercise would not have
resulted in much change at all. I came from a family with high
educational standards.
For other kids, the answer may have been very different. Being
pushed to learn only what your father knows, when your father is an
alcoholic janitor, is pretty darn limiting.
No offense intended to the alcoholic janitors among us. ;-)
Cmon jasa, you must be trolling.
So without assistance from the government, people are limited to
the occupational and/or educational realms of their parents? So
individuality, drive, desire, and open-minds don't exist or serve
no purpose, because you are destined to be one of your parents
without the government's help? We have reached a very sad point in
human existence.
Carston,
Just because I describe myself as a libertarian does not mean I
throw my hands up and say the government should not teach anything,
therefore it's ok for the government to teach whatever they want.
The job of a school board is ostensibly to promote the most useful
curricula with the best science available. But many of the posters
here say that it's ok for a board to say that gravity is caused by
the devil to test us, so long as a majority (or vocal minority) of
people represented by the board want that to be taught. That is an
incorrect assumption about the role of elected officials.
Now, if you want to get really specific: Biology teachers should
teach that natural selection is the best explanation for how (the
fact of) evolution works, with some discussion of discredited
theories if there is time. There is no time or place for ID in a
biology class, unless you're trying to teach how NOT to do
science.
Are you concerned that a biology teacher will explicitly say "The
fact of evolution proves there is no god" because that would never
happen.
Are you concerned that a biology teacher will explicitly say
"The fact of evolution proves there is no god" because that would
never happen.
The point I am trying to make, is that neither side deserves to
have their view sponsored by the government. Teaching creationism
does nothing to prepare students for the working world, and either
does teaching evolution.
My concern is for the public education all together, it needs to
focus on facts that prepare students to become functional members
of society, no matter what their chosen path may be after leaving
school.
Unless you are choosing to be in one of the specified fields, be it
mythology (Jewish,Christian, Islam, take your pick) or biology, the
teachings behind creationism and/or evolution do nothing for
you.
So without assistance from the government, people are
limited to the occupational and/or educational realms of their
parents?
WTF? Dude, we're talking about kids. The
university works as you suggest. They have adults for
clients.
Regarding "drive" and "desire": Would your 10, 12, hell, 16 year
old son go to school if you didn't make him? Would he learn algebra
if you didn't make him? If the answer is yes, you got damn
lucky.
Are you going to be willfully obtuse all day long?
Carston,
What are you arguing? That children should be able to choose their
eventual profession and should only study those subjects that will
help them in that profession?
I haven't used a single bit of calculus in my life since high
school. But I'm glad I had the option to study it. Biology is even
more important to a well-rounded education, and without a basic
understanding of evolution, you don't have a basic grasp of
biology. So the logical extension of your argument is that we need
not teach literature unless you're gonna be a lit. professor. How a
9th grader knows whether she will be a lit. professor or not you
don't explain.
The point, Carston, is that teaching the theory of evolution is
not teaching a "viewpoint." It is teaching the generally accepted,
scientifically testable and falsifiable theory relating to how
species develop over time. At the moment there exists no competing
"theory" that is able to make predictions or is falsifiable. If
there were, it would be appropriate to teach that alongside
evolution. As soon as you can explain to me how
creationism/ID/Flying Spaghettimonsterism can make any useful and
falsifiable predictions about the future based on observations of
the past I will be glad to let those be taught.
Biology is a pretty basic building block of a decent modern science
education. Evolution is a fundamental building block of a true
understanding of biology.
Just because they are kids, does not mean they are helpless or
unable to form their own thoughts, or do not have desire to be the
best. In my experiences with kids, they always want to be the best,
regardless of what the activity is.
Regarding "drive" and "desire": Would your 10, 12, hell, 16
year old son go to school if you didn't make him? Would he learn
algebra if you didn't make him?
Being in school doesn't imply learning. Just making a kid go there
guarantees nothing, many kids I went to school with that had a
great attendance record were still stupid. If a kid doesn't have it
naturally, parents must teach drive and desire and a want to
succeed. If this is done, kids will learn about what they want or
what they feel is important to them regardless of public
education.
Carston - apparently you don't understand the semantics or you
wouldn't be engaging in falsely equating creationism and evolution.
Also, apparently you haven't read the thread comments carefully and
haven't read up on the subject generally.
click
this link if you'd like to read my previous explanation of
theory
As to why it is important to understand biology even if you're not
a biologist: you are a biological entity. Biology is the basis of
medicine and health.
If a kid doesn't have it naturally, parents must teach drive
and desire and a want to succeed.
Thus my comment about the alcoholic janitor father dooming the son
to a very limited future.
I've gotten my answer; you are going to be obtuse
all day long.
@ the innominate one
I don't think you are reading into what I have been saying. I am
not disputing evolution, I am not disputing creationism, I am
disputing the fact that either of them serve a purpose in a public
K-12 education, be it in a philosophy or biology class.
Yes, basic biology needs to be taught, such as how to eat right and
keep yourself physically fit, other than that, it doesn't serve a
purpose in a K-12 education, unless the student wants to get into
that field after they are done with school.
Knowing the origins of human life do not serve a role in being a
functional member of society. Educators would be much better
serving their students with teachings in economics and financial
responsibility, since these are things that people actually deal
with throughout their lives, unlike the big bang and a rise from
the primordial goo.
Thus my comment about the alcoholic janitor father dooming
the son to a very limited future.
What can I say, stupid usually bears stupid, but there are
outliers. Maybe that alcoholic janitor should have maybe done
better for himself before having kids, but this is where personal
choice and individual responsibility come into play. We all feel
bad about the kids with shitty and/or poor parents, but unless you
advocate a nanny state, there isn't really anything you can do
about it. Just let them make their own mistakes and hopefully
people will learn from them, like learning from your fathers
mistakes, and not becoming a drunk.
Wow, we have really drifted from where this began.
I am reading what you are saying plainly, Carston. You continue
to falsely equate evolution with creationism as just two equally
viable viewpoints. You don't seem to be reading what I wrote. I am
aware you aren't disputing evolution per se.
There is much more to biology than health and nutrition; there is
much more to evolution than human origins.
You have a sadly limited view of the world. The American
educational model is based on giving everyone the opportunity for a
renaissance-style fully rounded education. I'm fully in favor of
letting 16+ year olds opt out of the college track for a vocational
track, but most people take biology as 14 and 15 year olds.
Another example: understanding evolution gives insight into the
production of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, a phenomenon of
increasing importance and frequency in the world.
Yes, basic biology needs to be taught, such as how to eat
right and keep yourself physically fit, other than that, it doesn't
serve a purpose in a K-12 education, unless the student wants to
get into that field after they are done with school.
So, the kid makes this decision before or after he learns about
evolution? ;-)
The whole point of a well rounded K-12 education is to equip a kid
to make those decisions.
You're killing me here, Carston, just killing me. Please stop
before I crack a rib.
...understanding evolution gives insight into the production of
antibiotic-resistant bacteria...
We're repeating each other, innominate one. Not that there's
anything wrong with that, it's standard lecture theory. :-)
Another example: understanding evolution gives insight into
the production of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, a phenomenon of
increasing importance and frequency in the world.
But only serves a purpose if you are a doctor, R&D at a drug
company, or some type of biochemist.
What makes you think I am equating creationism with evolution?? I
am just using those as examples since thats where this started.
There is a whole lot of nonsense going on a public schools that
needs to stop being taught, creationism and evolution are just the
subjects of this article.
Seems to me like we just have a basic disagreement on the purpose
of the public education system. I think that its purpose is to
prepare our citizens for the working world by teaching them the
basic skills necessary to start their life. While I cant really
pinpoint your view on its purpose, my guess is its something like
throwing a handful of rocks at the lake hoping one will skip, i.e.
expose children to everything that is out there, and hope they pick
up on something they are good at and like, regardless of all the
time wasted (wasted in my opinion) on stuff they will never have
anything to do with in their career.
I think that its purpose is to prepare our citizens for the
working world by teaching them the basic skills necessary to start
their life.
So 9 months out of the year, 8 hours a day, 5 days a week and we
can't even squeeze in the foundations of biology somewhere?
So, the kid makes this decision before or after he learns
about evolution? ;-)
Well, hopefully these kids aren't making their own decisions on
what to eat and exercising, since they are kids and living with
their parents or some type of guardian.
Oh, your talking about the career path. So someone needs to be
taught about evolution before they decide they like subject of
biology? Surely there are other aspects of biology that do not deal
with the origin of human life, like learning about plants and
animals, their relationships and environments. Thats at least what
I was learning about in 8th and 9th grade stuck in biology classes,
and when I decided I wanted nothing to do with the subject.
So 9 months out of the year, 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
and we can't even squeeze in the foundations of biology
somewhere?
Well we could, but would it really improve anything, or just be a
waste of students time when they could be learning things that
everyone needs to know.
Carston,
I absolutely agree with you about what kids should learn in school:
first the very basics, enough to live independently in the world.
Then only what they want, what they're interested in. Our
educational system would improve a great deal if it focused on the
basics and made everything else an elective.
But, in this imaginary, practical world of education, if a kid is
interested in the natural world, they would learn about evolution
the way they would learn about gravity and astronomy and germs,
etc.
When you wrote "The point I am trying to make, is that neither
side deserves to have their view sponsored by the government." you
were equating evolution and creationism as two equally viable
viewpoints, when in fact one is scientific fact grounded in
empirical evidence (and also theory, just as gravity is both fact
and theory) and the other is a religious belief grounded in faith.
Thus, creationism isn't taught in science class because it isn't
scientific and it isn't taught in public schools because it
violates the establishment clause of the U.S. Constitution.
When I wrote "The American educational model is based on giving
everyone the opportunity for a renaissance-style fully rounded
education." I was explaining the philosophy behind the development
of the curriculum content of the public school system. Since the
vast majority of high school students don't yet know what their
careers are going to be, perhaps exposure to a variety of subjects
to see what they might be interested in is a good thing.
Similarly, how can people have an opinion on evolution if they have
never learned about it (or have only learned an inaccurate version
of it from a biased opponent). Evolution stands up very well to
critical examination. The fact that it is singled out for criticism
(where atomic theory is not) is obviously related to the emotional
implications of the theory for people's beliefs.
As for shoving theories down people's throats, I've always pointed
out to my students they were expected to learn and demonstrate to
me that they had learned what biologists have demonstrated about
evolution and the current consensus on various facets of the topic.
I don't care what they personally believe, I have no control over
that. If they have questions, I'm happy to address them, but
honestly the opinion of an uninformed person on evolution makes me
no never mind. Similarly, I don't expect physicists to take my
opinion on relativity very seriously. You see, I'm not a physicist,
and despite my interest in relativity have a limited understanding
of the topic.
If you think only doctors and biochemists need to understand
antibiotic resistance and germ transmission, I predict you will
contract a case of MRSA before long.
You're welcome to your opinion, though I think it's quite wrong. It
is also plainly uninformed (i.e. your misunderstanding of the
semantics of the word "theory"). You ought to have greater
appreciation for your own limitations of knowledge and
experience.
"Surely there are other aspects of biology that do not deal with
the origin of human life, like learning about plants and animals,
their relationships and environments."
As I previously stated, there is much more to evolution than human
origins. You continue to erect straw men and drag red herrings. The
plants and animals are related by (ready?) evolutionary
relationships and have evolved adaptations to their
environments.
I'm out, troll.
The American educational model is based on giving everyone
the opportunity for a renaissance-style fully rounded
education.
Unfortunately, this is impossible for the state to do without
willing students and parents. I think by decreasing the mandatory
subjects to that which is necessary to live independently (reading,
writing, basic math up to pre-algebra), and making everything else
elective, we would see a more efficient and effective public school
system.
you were equating evolution and creationism as two equally
viable viewpoints
I was not equating the two, I was using them as starting off points
because this is where the debate lies, and as I have stated
numerous times, I have no horse in this race, both horses should
have already been shot (as far as them belonging in required k-12)
in my opinion.
That is very neat you know about "The American educational system"
and "renaissance-style fully rounded education" but that doesn't
change the fact that it ISN'T WORKING. That is what we need to go
to a system based in teaching student the basic skills necessary to
start their life, and then from then on, they can choose to study
what ever they would like.
As for forming an opinion, that could be gone about the way people
form opinions on every other subject that exists in this universe
by finding their own sources and evaluating themselves and choosing
who to trust.
Your teaching style, I have no problem with, but if the students
aren't going to use the knowledge in the future other than their
assignments and tests, what was the purpose of learning it all?
They could have been using that time more efficiently by learning
something that they have an interest in or will eventually be found
useful. I was not saying you in particular are shoving anything
down anyone's throat, but the system itself forcing kids to waste a
lot of their valuable years on crap that they will never have to
recall as long as they live.
I know there is much more to evolution than human origins, but that
is where the focus lies in every lecture I have observed or book I
have read. Maybe I have had bad teachers in that sense, but
obviously if humans evolved we had to evolve from something.
As for MSRA, I had to google it to know what it is, and I don't
think I will be having any problems like that. I'm pretty sure my
doctor knows what it is, and how to check for it, so I don't have
anything to worry about.
Its pretty sad we are having a debate on a subject and you turn it
to name calling and accusing me of becoming infected with some
shit. Also, where are these straw men and red herrings you speak
of? My stance from the beginning was that evolution and creationism
have no place in k12, and thats where I have stayed.
How about responding to the question I asked about your education
philosophy, where mine was "prepare our citizens for the working
world by teaching them the basic skills necessary to start their
life" and yours I was guessing was "expose children to everything
that is out there, and hope they pick up on something they are good
at and like, regardless of all the time wasted (wasted in my
opinion) on stuff they will never have anything to do with in their
career."
Carston,
A couple of questions:
you don't think American high schools should teach either
creationism or evolutionary science, but "prepare our citizens for
the working world by teaching them the basic skills necessary to
start their life"? Who decides what a basic skill is? What is " not
working"? (vis-a-vis the American school system).
the problem with your idea is that you believe that this is all a
matter of opinion, like whether or not you like jazz or not. it
isn't a matter of opinion. That is pseudo-intellectual bullshit,
quite frankly. That is aesthetics, man. Evolutionary Biology is
useful. Creationism is not. I am expressing it using your own value
system of useful/not-useful (which I do have problems with.)
The problem with focusing on pure use-value in education is you
never know what will or will not be useful in one's life. The point
of the classical education is to put as many tools in the toolbox
as possible, because one never knows what kind of problem one might
have to solve.
And yes, should we be paternalistic about K-12 education? Damn
right. They are kids, you know... And frankly, I would rather have
some State oversight into my Local schoolboard's curriculum. I grew
up in Texas and half of those fools still believe the Earth is only
10000 years old. It isn't. They're wrong, but if enough of them
stock the school board, my kids and neighbors kids get graded on
fantasies and wrong information. Why is this bad? Because if they
wanna go to college (and make more money on average than a
non-college grad) and they wanna study any of the health sciences
OR biology for its own sake,the kids have to re-do bio. my local
fundamentalists just wasted my kids time and MY TAX money. And
that's really what it's all about now isn't it?
reading writing and arithmetic. i dont see evolution or creationism on that list. kids dont need to learn it.
you don't think American high schools should teach either
creationism or evolutionary science, but "prepare our citizens for
the working world by teaching them the basic skills necessary to
start their life"? Who decides what a basic skill is?
Basic skills, like things people use on a daily basis, reading,
writing, arithmetic (like the guy above me said), and a basic
knowledge of US history and our government.
What is " not working"? (vis-a-vis the American school
system).
How about we are graduating people who don't know the 3 branches of
government, and in many cities there is a more than 50% drop out
rate. This tells me kids are either extremely bored (so been there)
or they are being taught garbage they feel is useless, and most of
the time, I would have to agree with them.
Everyone who has objectively looked a this issue will agree that the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster has discovered the only real truth on this subject. If I.D. is going to be taught then FSM is equally valid and as a Pastafarian I want my version of creation taught also. And I don't want any discrimination when my kids dress up as Pirates during our religious holiday season either.
I'd like to commend roguepatriot on the only sensible post in this entire Quality Thread (tm), which of course got zero response from the noise machines that followed.
"Allowing an inquiry into evolution, I believe, will almost
certainly confirm its existence in the minds of millions of
children."
No. You seem to be wearing blinders, in that everything depends of
HOW the debate (between evolution and creationism) is presented. If
the debate is presented as valid, in any way, we have lost our
children. End of story.
If I want to believe the Sun revolves around the Earth,
shouldn't I have the right to go to a school that confirms it?
Won't my engineering degree be just as valid as one that teaches
Newtonian physics?
Stop stepping on my freedom!
1. Not to be in the echo chamber here, but you can't teach
creationism in science class because it isn't science. Not to
mention evolutionary biology isn't exactly cosmology, which is
really what creationism/ID actually is. Think what this sensibility
would do to physics classes as well.
2. So, we'll "teach to the controversy", eh? So that means we
should allow equal time in History class for Holocaust deniers to
make their case? Should Brown v. Board of Education include a
pro-segregation section? Oh, that's right, "teach to the
controversy" means "teach evangelical Christianity".
3. What ultimately offends me is the author's suggestion that if a
school doesn't specifically cater to the religious superstitions of
the families, that the state should allocate taxpayer funds in
order to help said families maintain their isolation from a
pluralistic society. No offense, but religiously based societies
have a tendency to fly planes into buildings because they think
their god wants them to.
3.
the only industrialized nation with worse rates in the belief of evolution than america is turkey. even nations that have state churches uniformally belive in evolution...sad
There are many subjects people disagree on. Surely not just
evolution, US history (founding fathers: freedom fighters or slave
owners who didn't want to pay taxes?), sex education, aids/STD
topics. Physics, ("how old is the Earth?"), Biology, (nature vs.
nuture), literature (the all Western White Male classics curriculum
or one with less classics but a more diverse (and possibly more
relatable perspective?).
My point is, is that there are numerous permutations of various
choices and we'd have to allow an exponential number of varieties
in order to truly have a free choice. It quickly becomes
unmanageable and one can easily see the pragmatism behind
standardization.
"The most sensible solution, of course, would be to permit
parents a choice so that they can send their kids to schools that
cater to any brand of nonsense they desire-outside of three core
subjects."
Wait, wait. Why the libertarian exception for three core subjects?
If local control is always best, surely that includes the three
favored subjects. If central control is best for three subjects,
why exactly those three?
The option already exists. Private parochial school. Of course that would require one to put their money where their belief is. Public funds spent on essentially religious arguments? A model already exists: Madrassa. Bottom line, it's science or it isn't. A beleaguered Bio prof of mine tried to head this off years back, allowing the creation argument to be raised and discussed for one period...after which he intended to do his job and teach the science. Didn't work, of course. A cabal of young creationist continually "corrected" the scientific record, to the exasperation of eighty others. I dropped the class and picked up the section later. Cost me an intersession.
Your right in that parents should be able to teach there kds
whatever kind of nonsense they want.but guess what not in public
school.
Should we then ban black kids from attending because the KKK thinks
theyre inferior?
I mean really this is science......kind of important in this day to
keep our country competetive ,no?
They are still free.........free to leave.
This may be a bit heretical: but why does liberty imply that parents own their children? In other words, why should a kid have their future ruined because their parents find reality scary? That's exactly what vouchers to schools that teach any bullshit they feel like would amount to. I speak from experience here. If my parents hadn't become too poor to send me to private school about the time I was in fifth grade, I don't think I would have ever learned the necessary to succeed in history, now my chosen field.
This article is an embarrassment - I haven't read anything this fantastically stupid probably since the election. Whoever decided to post this under the guise of a legitimate intellectual inquiry into the issue of teaching evolution is a hack and a sophist, and this Harsanyi fellow is worse still.
I think christians need to explain the talking snake and how Adam and EVE had to screw their own kids to perpetuate the species.
Simple solution:
They teach Creationism in public schools.
We teach Evolution in Church.
Why are so many allegedly tolerant and science-loving
Americans aghast at the notion that their beliefs will be
scrutinized in schools?
This question encapsulates a lot of ignorance on this issue.
First, let's look at the use of the term "beliefs". The left has a
BELIEF that gays should be able to marry. They have a BELIEF that
we should have a progressive tax. The right believes that life
begins at conception. These are "beliefs".
Evolution is not a "belief". It is a scientific theory, with more
evidence supporting it than practically any other scientific theory
in existence. It is a theory that covers all of life on our planet
that does or ever has existed, and yet has few holes.
Evolution has been shown to be correct at the macro level. It has
been shown to be correct on the micro level. It is backed up by the
fossil record. It is backed up by current observations. There is no
real evidence contradicting it, and more and more of these supposed
holes are being filled as the years pass.
The issue isn't that ideas shouldn't be scrutinized. It's that no
high school student can possibly comprehend the vast array of
evidence for evolution. Being able to scrutinize and intelligently
debate he micro level evidence is probably even beyond the
abilities of most biologists.
That is why evolution in particular should be taught as is. There
is simply no credible evidence against it, and no other hypothesis
or theory that comes anywhere close to explaining what evolution
does. Just like gravity. Just like the elements.
If you want students to learn to think and assess, give them a
topic that truly has multiple sides. Don't take a theory with
overwhelming evidence and compare it to theology.
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