Rejection of evolution by religious groups
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The creation–evolution controversy (also termed the creation vs. evolution debate or the origins debate) involves a recurring cultural, political, and theological dispute about the origins of the Earth, of humanity, and of other life. The level of support for evolution is extremely high within the scientific community[1][2][3][4] and in academia.[5] While the controversy has a long history,[6][7] today it is mainly over what constitutes good science education,[8][9] with the politics of creationism primarily focusing on the teaching of creation and evolution in public education.[10][11][12][13][14] Among majority-Christian countries, the debate is most prominent in the United States, and to a lesser extent in Europe and elsewhere,[15] and is often portrayed as part of a culture war.[16] Parallel controversies also exist in some other religious communities, such as the more fundamentalist branches of Judaism[17] and Islam.[18]
Christian fundamentalists dispute the evidence of common descent of humans and other animals as demonstrated in modern paleontology, genetics, histology and cladistics and those other sub-disciplines which are based upon the conclusions of modern evolutionary biology, geology, cosmology, and other related fields. They argue for the Abrahamic accounts of creation, framing them as reputable science ("creation science").
The Catholic Church recognizes the existence of evolution. Pope Francis has stated: "God is not a divine being or a magician, but the Creator who brought everything to life...Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the notion of creation, because evolution requires the creation of beings that evolve."[19][20] The rules of genetic evolutionary inheritance were first discovered by a Catholic priest, the Augustinian monk Gregor Mendel, who is known today as the founder of modern genetics.
According to a 2014 Gallup survey, "More than four in 10 Americans continue to believe that God created humans in their present form 10,000 years ago, a view that has changed little over the past three decades. Half of Americans believe humans evolved, with the majority of these saying God guided the evolutionary process. However, the percentage who say God was not involved is rising."[21]
The debate is sometimes portrayed as being between science and religion, but as the United States National Academy of Sciences states:
Today, many religious denominations accept that biological evolution has produced the diversity of living things over billions of years of Earth's history. Many have issued statements observing that evolution and the tenets of their faiths are compatible. Scientists and theologians have written eloquently about their awe and wonder at the history of the universe and of life on this planet, explaining that they see no conflict between their faith in God and the evidence for evolution. Religious denominations that do not accept the occurrence of evolution tend to be those that believe in strictly literal interpretations of religious texts.
— National Academy of Sciences, Science, Evolution, and Creationism[22]
History
The creation–evolution controversy began in Europe and North America in the late 18th century, when new interpretations of geology led to various theories of an ancient earth, and extinctions demonstrated in the fossil geological sequence prompted early ideas of evolution, notably Lamarckism. In England these ideas of continuing change were at first seen as a threat to the existing "fixed" social order, and both church and state repressed them.[23] Conditions gradually eased, and in 1844 Robert Chambers's controversial Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation popularised the idea of transmutation of species. The scientific establishment at first dismissed it scornfully and the Church of England reacted with fury, but many Unitarians, Quakers and Baptists—groups opposed to the privileges of the established church—favoured its ideas of God acting through such laws.[24][25]
Contemporary reaction to Darwin
By the end of the 19th century, there was no serious scientific opposition to the basic evolutionary tenets of descent with modification and the common ancestry of all forms of life.
— Science and Religion: A Very Short Introduction [26]
The publication of Darwin's On the Origin of Species in 1859 brought scientific credibility to evolution, and made it a respectable field of study.[27]
Despite the intense interest in the religious implications of Darwin's book, theological controversy over higher criticism set out in Essays and Reviews (1860) largely diverted the Church of England's attention. Some of the liberal Christian authors of that work expressed support for Darwin, as did many Nonconformists. The Reverend Charles Kingsley, for instance, openly supported the idea of God working through evolution.[28] Other Christians opposed the idea, and even some of Darwin's close friends and supporters—including Charles Lyell and Asa Gray—initially expressed reservations about some of his ideas.[29] Gray later became a staunch supporter of Darwin in America, and collected together a number of his own writings to produce an influential book, Darwiniana (1876). These essays argued for a conciliation between Darwinian evolution and the tenets of theism, at a time when many on both sides perceived the two as mutually exclusive.[30] Gray said that investigation of physical causes was not opposed to the theological view and the study of the harmonies between mind and Nature, and thought it "most presumable that an intellectual conception realized in Nature would be realized through natural agencies."[31] Thomas Huxley, who strongly promoted Darwin's ideas while campaigning to end the dominance of science by the clergy, coined the term agnostic to describe his position that God's existence is unknowable. Darwin also took this position,[29] but prominent atheists including Edward Aveling and Ludwig Büchner also took up evolution and it was criticised, in the words of one reviewer, as "tantamount to atheism."[32][33][34][35] Following the lead of figures such as St. George Jackson Mivart and John Augustine Zahm, Roman Catholics in the United States became accepting of evolution itself while ambivalent towards natural selection and stressing humanity's divinely imbued soul.[36] The Catholic Church never condemned evolution, and initially the more conservative-leaning Catholic leadership in Rome held back, but gradually adopted a similar position.[36][37]
During the late 19th century evolutionary ideas were most strongly disputed by the premillennialists, who held to a prophecy of the imminent return of Christ based on a form of Biblical literalism, and were convinced that the Bible would be invalidated if any error in the Scriptures was conceded. However, hardly any of the critics of evolution at that time were as concerned about geology, freely granting scientists any time they needed before the Edenic creation to account for scientific observations, such as fossils and geological findings.[38] In the immediate post-Darwinian era, few scientists or clerics rejected the antiquity of the earth, the progressive nature of the fossil record.[39] Likewise, few attached geological significance to the Biblical flood, unlike subsequent creationists.[39] Evolutionary skeptics, creationist leaders and skeptical scientists were usually either willing to adopt a figurative reading of the first chapter of the Book of Genesis, or allowed that the six days of creation were not necessarily 24-hour days.[40]
Science professors at liberal northeastern universities[which?] almost immediately embraced the theory of evolution and introduced it to their students. However, some people in parts of the south and west of the United States, which had been influenced by the preachings of Christian fundamentalist evangelicals, rejected the theory as immoral.[41]
Creationism in theology
At the beginning of the 19th century debate had started to develop over applying historical methods to Biblical criticism, suggesting a less literal account of the Bible. Simultaneously, the developing science of geology indicated the Earth was ancient, and religious thinkers sought to accommodate this by day-age creationism or gap creationism. Neptunianist catastrophism, which had earlier proposed that a universal flood could explain all geological features, gave way to ideas of geological gradualism (introduced in 1795 by James Hutton) based upon the erosion and depositional cycle over millions of years, which gave a better explanation of the sedimentary column. Biology and the discovery of extinction (first described in the 1750s and put on a firm footing by Georges Cuvier in 1796) challenged ideas of a fixed immutable Aristotelian "great chain of being." Natural theology had earlier expected that scientific findings based on empirical evidence would help religious understanding. These differences led some to increasingly regard science and theology as concerned with different, non-competitive domains.
When most scientists came to accept evolution (by around 1875), European theologians generally came to accept evolution as an instrument of God. Pope Leo XIII, for instance, referred to longstanding Christian thought that scriptural interpretations could be reevaluated in the light of new knowledge,[citation needed] and Roman Catholics came around to acceptance of human evolution subject to direct creation of the soul. In the United States the development of the racist Social Darwinian eugenics movement led a number of Catholics to reject evolution.[29] In this enterprise they received little aid from conservative Christians in Great Britain and Europe. In Britain this has been attributed to their minority status leading to a more tolerant, less militant theological tradition.[42] In his speech at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences in 2014, Pope Francis declared that he accepted the Big Bang theory and the theory of evolution and God was not “a magician with a magic wand”.[43]
Development of creationism in the United States
At first in the U.S., evangelical Christians paid little attention to the developments in geology and biology, being more concerned with the rise of higher Biblical criticism which questioned the belief in the Bible as literal truth. Those criticising these approaches took the name "fundamentalist"—originally coined by its supporters to describe a specific package of theological beliefs that developed into a movement within the Protestant community of the United States in the early part of the 20th century, and which had its roots in the Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy of the 1920s and 1930s.[44] The term usually has a religious connotation indicating unwavering attachment to a set of irreducible beliefs.[45]
Up until the early mid-20th century[when?] mainline denominations within the United States showed little official resistance to evolution. Around the start of the 20th century some evangelical scholars had ideas accommodating evolution, such as B. B. Warfield who saw it as a natural law expressing God's will. By then most U.S. high school and college biology classes taught scientific evolution, but several factors, including the rise of Christian fundamentalism and social factors of changes and insecurity in more traditionalist Bible Belt communities, led to a backlash. The numbers of children receiving secondary education increased rapidly, and parents who had fundamentalist tendencies or who opposed social ideas of what was called "survival of the fittest" had real concerns about what their children were learning about evolution.[29]
British creationism
The main British creationist movement in this period, the Evolution Protest Movement (EPM), formed in the 1930s[42] out of the Victoria Institute, or Philosophical Society of Great Britain (founded in 1865 in response to the publication of Darwin's On the Origin of Species in 1859 and of Essays and Reviews in 1860). The Victoria Institute had the stated objective of defending "the great truths revealed in Holy Scripture ... against the opposition of Science falsely so called." Although it did not officially oppose evolution, it attracted a number of scientists sceptical of Darwinism, including John William Dawson and Arnold Guyot.[46] It reached a high point of 1,246 members in 1897, but quickly plummeted to less than one third of that figure in the first two decades of the twentieth century.[46] Although it was anti-evolution at first, the institute joined the theistic evolution camp by the 1920s, which led to the development of the Evolution Protest Movement in reaction. Amateur ornithologist Douglas Dewar, the main driving force within the EPM, published a booklet entitled Man: A Special Creation (1936) and engaged in public speaking and debates with supporters of evolution. In the late 1930s he resisted American creationists' call for acceptance of flood geology, which later led to conflict within the organisation. Despite trying to win the public endorsement of C. S. Lewis, the most prominent Christian apologist of his day, by the mid-1950s the EPM came under control of schoolmaster/pastor Albert G. Tilney, whose dogmatic and authoritarian style ran the organisation "as a one-man band," rejecting flood geology, unwaveringly promoting gap creationism, and reducing the membership to lethargic inactivity.[47] It was renamed Creation Science Movement (CSM) in 1980, under the chairmanship of David Rosevear, who holds a Ph.D. in organometallic chemistry from the University of Bristol. By the mid-1980s the CSM had formally incorporated flood geology into its "Deed of Trust" (which all officers had to sign) and condemned gap creationism and day-age creationism as unscriptural.
United States legal challenges and their consequences
In 1925, Tennessee passed a statute called the Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of the theory of evolution in all schools in the state. Later that year, a similar law was passed in Mississippi, and likewise, Arkansas in 1927. In 1968, these "anti-monkey" laws were struck down by the Supreme Court of the United States as unconstitutional, "because they established a religious doctrine violating both the First and Fourth Amendments to the United States Constitution."[48]
The modern struggle of religious fundamentalists accepting creationism, to get their rejection of evolution accepted as legitimate science within education institutions in the U.S., has been highlighted through a series of important court cases.
Butler Act and Scopes monkey trial
In the aftermath of World War I, the Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy had brought a surge of opposition to the idea of evolution, and following the campaigning of William Jennings Bryan several states introduced legislation prohibiting the teaching of evolution. By 1925, such legislation was being considered in 15 states, and had passed in some states, such as Tennessee.[49] The American Civil Liberties Union offered to defend anyone who wanted to bring a test case against one of these laws. John T. Scopes accepted, and he confessed to teaching his Tennessee class evolution in defiance of the Butler Act. The textbook in question was George William Hunter's A Civic Biology: Presented in Problems (1914). The trial was widely publicized by H. L. Mencken among others, and is commonly referred to as the Scopes Monkey Trial. Scopes was convicted but the widespread publicity galvanized proponents of evolution. When the case was appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court, the Court overturned the decision on a technicality (the judge had assessed the minimum $100 fine instead of allowing the jury to assess the fine).[50]
Although it overturned the conviction, the Court decided that the law was not in violation of the Religious Preference provisions of the Tennessee Constitution (Section 3 of Article 1), which stated "that no preference shall ever be given, by law, to any religious establishment or mode of worship."[51] The Court, applying that state constitutional language, held:
We are not able to see how the prohibition of teaching the theory that man has descended from a lower order of animals gives preference to any religious establishment or mode of worship. So far as we know, there is no religious establishment or organized body that has in its creed or confession of faith any article denying or affirming such a theory.... Protestants, Catholics, and Jews are divided among themselves in their beliefs, and that there is no unanimity among the members of any religious establishment as to this subject. Belief or unbelief in the theory of evolution is no more a characteristic of any religious establishment or mode of worship than is belief or unbelief in the wisdom of the prohibition laws. It would appear that members of the same churches quite generally disagree as to these things.
... Furthermore, [the Butler Act] requires the teaching of nothing. It only forbids the teaching of evolution of man from a lower order of animals.... As the law thus stands, while the theory of evolution of man may not be taught in the schools of the State, nothing contrary to that theory [such as Creationism] is required to be taught.
... It is not necessary now to determine the exact scope of the Religious Preference clause of the Constitution ... Section 3 of Article 1 is binding alike on the Legislature and the school authorities. So far we are clear that the Legislature has not crossed these constitutional limitations.
— Scopes v. State, 289 S.W. 363, 367 (Tenn. 1927).[52]
The interpretation of the Establishment Clause of the United States Constitution up to that time was that the government could not establish a particular religion as the State religion. The Tennessee Supreme Court's decision held in effect that the Butler Act was constitutional under the state Constitution's Religious Preference Clause, because the Act did not establish one religion as the "State religion."[53] As a result of the holding, the teaching of evolution remained illegal in Tennessee, and continued campaigning succeeded in removing evolution from school textbooks throughout the United States.[54][55][56][57]
Epperson v. Arkansas
In 1968, the United States Supreme Court invalidated a forty-year-old Arkansas statute that prohibited the teaching of evolution in the public schools. A Little Rock, Arkansas, high school biology teacher, Susan Epperson, filed suit charging the law violated the federal constitutional prohibition against establishment of religion as set forth in the Establishment Clause. The Little Rock Ministerial Association supported Epperson's challenge, declaring, "to use the Bible to support an irrational and an archaic concept of static and undeveloping creation is not only to misunderstand the meaning of the Book of Genesis, but to do God and religion a disservice by making both enemies of scientific advancement and academic freedom."[58] The Court held that the United States Constitution prohibits a state from requiring, in the words of the majority opinion, "that teaching and learning must be tailored to the principles or prohibitions of any religious sect or dogma."[59] But the Supreme Court decision also suggested that creationism could be taught in addition to evolution.[60]
Daniel v. Waters
Daniel v. Waters was a 1975 legal case in which the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit struck down Tennessee's law regarding the teaching of "equal time" of evolution and creationism in public school science classes because it violated the Establishment Clause. Following this ruling, creationism was stripped of overt biblical references and renamed "Creation Science," and several states passed legislative acts requiring that this be given equal time with the teaching of evolution.
Creation science
As biologists grew more and more confident in evolution as the central defining principle of biology,[61][62] American membership in churches favoring increasingly literal interpretations of scripture also rose, with the Southern Baptist Convention and Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod outpacing all other denominations.[63] With growth and increased finances, these churches became better equipped to promulgate a creationist message, with their own colleges, schools, publishing houses, and broadcast media.[64]
In 1961, the first major modern creationist book was published: John C. Whitcomb and Henry M. Morris' influential The Genesis Flood: The Biblical Record and Its Scientific Implications. The authors argued that creation was literally 6 days long, that humans lived concurrently with dinosaurs, and that God created each 'kind' of life individually.[65][66] On the strength of this, Morris became a popular speaker, spreading anti-evolutionary ideas at fundamentalist churches, colleges, and conferences.[65] Morris' Creation Science Research Center (CSRC) rushed publication of biology textbooks that promoted creationism.[67] Ultimately, the CSRC broke up over a divide between sensationalism and a more intellectual approach, and Morris founded the Institute for Creation Research, which was promised to be controlled and operated by scientists.[68] During this time, Morris and others who supported flood geology adopted the terms "scientific creationism" and "creation science."[69] The "flood geology" theory effectively co-opted "the generic creationist label for their hyperliteralist views."[70][71]
Court cases
McLean v. Arkansas
In 1982, another case in Arkansas ruled that the Arkansas "Balanced Treatment for Creation-Science and Evolution-Science Act" (Act 590) was unconstitutional because it violated the Establishment Clause. Much of the transcript of the case was lost, including evidence from Francisco Ayala.
Edwards v. Aguillard
In the early 1980s, the Louisiana legislature passed a law titled the "Balanced Treatment for Creation-Science and Evolution-Science Act." The act did not require teaching either evolution or creationism as such, but did require that when evolutionary science was taught, creation science had to be taught as well. Creationists had lobbied aggressively for the law, arguing that the act was about academic freedom for teachers, an argument adopted by the state in support of the act. Lower courts ruled that the State's actual purpose was to promote the religious doctrine of creation science, but the State appealed to the Supreme Court.
In the similar case of McLean v. Arkansas (see above) the federal trial court had also decided against creationism. Mclean v. Arkansas was not appealed to the federal Circuit Court of Appeals, creationists instead thinking that they had better chances with Edwards v. Aguillard. In 1987 the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Louisiana act was also unconstitutional, because the law was specifically intended to advance a particular religion. At the same time, it stated its opinion that "teaching a variety of scientific theories about the origins of humankind to school children might be validly done with the clear secular intent of enhancing the effectiveness of science instruction," leaving open the door for a handful of proponents of creation science to evolve their arguments into the iteration of creationism that later came to be known as intelligent design.[72]
Intelligent design
In response to Edwards v. Aguillard, the neo-creationist intelligent design movement was formed around the Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture. It makes the claim that "certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as natural selection."[74] It has been viewed as a "scientific" approach to creationism by creationists, but is widely rejected as unscientific by the science community—primarily because intelligent design cannot be tested and rejected like scientific hypotheses (see for example, List of scientific bodies explicitly rejecting Intelligent design).
Kansas evolution hearings
In the push by intelligent design advocates to introduce intelligent design in public school science classrooms, the hub of the intelligent design movement, the Discovery Institute, arranged to conduct hearings to review the evidence for evolution in the light of its Critical Analysis of Evolution lesson plans. The Kansas evolution hearings were a series of hearings held in Topeka, Kansas, May 5 to May 12, 2005. The Kansas State Board of Education eventually adopted the institute's Critical Analysis of Evolution lesson plans over objections of the State Board Science Hearing Committee, and electioneering on behalf of conservative Republican Party candidates for the Board.[75] On August 1, 2006, four of the six conservative Republicans who approved the Critical Analysis of Evolution classroom standards lost their seats in a primary election. The moderate Republican and Democrats gaining seats vowed to overturn the 2005 school science standards and adopt those recommended by a State Board Science Hearing Committee that were rejected by the previous board,[76] and on February 13, 2007, the Board voted 6 to 4 to reject the amended science standards enacted in 2005. The definition of science was once again limited to "the search for natural explanations for what is observed in the universe."[77]
Dover trial
Following the Edwards v. Aguillard decision by the United States Supreme Court, in which the Court held that a Louisiana law requiring that creation science be taught in public schools whenever evolution was taught was unconstitutional, because the law was specifically intended to advance a particular religion, creationists renewed their efforts to introduce creationism into public school science classes. This effort resulted in intelligent design, which sought to avoid legal prohibitions by leaving the source of creation to an unnamed and undefined intelligent designer, as opposed to God.[78] This ultimately resulted in the "Dover Trial," Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, which went to trial on 26 September 2005 and was decided on 20 December 2005 in favor of the plaintiffs, who charged that a mandate that intelligent design be taught in public school science classrooms was an unconstitutional establishment of religion. The Kitzmiller v. Dover decision held that intelligent design was not a subject of legitimate scientific research, and that it "cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and hence religious, antecedents."[79]
The December 2005 ruling in the Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District trial[80] supported the viewpoint of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and other science and education professional organizations who say that proponents of Teach the Controversy seek to undermine the teaching of evolution[2][81] while promoting intelligent design,[82][83][84] and to advance an education policy for U.S. public schools that introduces creationist explanations for the origin of life to public-school science curricula.[80][85]
Texas Board of Education support for intelligent design
On March 27, 2009, the Texas Board of Education, by a vote of 13 to 2, voted that at least in Texas, textbooks must teach intelligent design alongside evolution, and question the validity of the fossil record. Don McLeroy, a dentist and chair of the board, said, "I think the new standards are wonderful ... dogmatism about evolution [has sapped] America's scientific soul." According to Science magazine, "Because Texas is the second-largest textbook market in the United States, publishers have a strong incentive to be certified by the board as 'conforming 100% to the state's standards'."[86] The 2009 Texas Board of Education hearings were chronicled in the 2012 documentary The Revisionaries.
Recent developments
The scientific consensus on the origins and evolution of life continues to be challenged by creationist organizations and religious groups who desire to uphold some form of creationism (usually young Earth creationism, creation science, old Earth creationism or intelligent design) as an alternative. Most of these groups are literalist Christians who believe the biblical account is inerrant, and more than one sees the debate as part of the Christian mandate to evangelize.[87][88] Some groups see science and religion as being diametrically opposed views that cannot be reconciled. More accommodating viewpoints, held by many mainstream churches and many scientists, consider science and religion to be separate categories of thought (non-overlapping magisteria), which ask fundamentally different questions about reality and posit different avenues for investigating it.[89]
More recently, the intelligent design movement has attempted an anti-evolution position that avoids any direct appeal to religion. Scientists argue that intelligent design does not represent any research program within the mainstream scientific community, and is still essentially creationism.[4][90] Its leading proponent, the Discovery Institute, made widely publicised claims that it was a new science, although the only paper arguing for it published in a scientific journal was accepted in questionable circumstances and quickly disavowed in the Sternberg peer review controversy, with the Biological Society of Washington stating that it did not meet the journal's scientific standards, was a "significant departure" from the journal's normal subject area and was published at the former editor's sole discretion, "contrary to typical editorial practices."[91] On August 1, 2005, U.S. President George W. Bush commented endorsing the teaching of intelligent design alongside evolution "I felt like both sides ought to be properly taught ... so people can understand what the debate is about."[8][92]
Viewpoints
In the controversy a number of divergent opinions can be recognised, regarding both the acceptance of scientific theories and religious practice.
Young Earth creationism
Young Earth creationism rejects completely the conventional scientific approach and argues for the belief that the Earth was created by God within the last 10,000 years, literally as described in Genesis, within the approximate timeframe of biblical genealogies (detailed for example in the Ussher chronology). Young Earth creationists often believe that the Universe has a similar age to the Earth's. Creationist cosmologies are attempts by some creationist thinkers to give the universe an age consistent with the Ussher chronology and other Young-Earth timeframes. This belief generally has a basis in biblical literalism.
Old Earth creationism
Old Earth creationism holds that the physical universe was created by God, but that the creation event of Genesis within 6 days is not to be taken strictly literally. This group generally accepts the age of the Universe and the age of the Earth as described by astronomers and geologists, but that details of the evolutionary theory are questionable. Old Earth creationists interpret the Genesis creation narrative in a number of ways, that each differ from the six, consecutive, 24-hour day creation of the young Earth creationist view.
Neo-creationism
Neo-creationists intentionally distance themselves from other forms of creationism, preferring to be known as wholly separate from creationism as a philosophy. They wish to re-frame the debate over the origins of life in non-religious terms and without appeals to scripture, and to bring the debate before the public. Neo-creationists may be either young Earth or old Earth creationists, and hold a range of underlying theological viewpoints (e.g. on the interpretation of the Bible). Neo-creationism currently exists in the form of the intelligent design movement, which has a 'big tent' strategy making it inclusive of many young Earth creationists (such as Paul Nelson and Percival Davis).
Theistic evolution
Theistic evolution is the general view that, instead of faith being in opposition to biological evolution, some or all classical religious teachings about God and creation are compatible with some or all of modern scientific theory, including, specifically, evolution. It generally views evolution as a tool used by a creator god, who is both the first cause and immanent sustainer/upholder of the universe; it is therefore well accepted by people of strong theistic (as opposed to deistic) convictions. Theistic evolution can synthesize with the day-age interpretation of the Genesis creation myth; most adherents consider that the first chapters of Genesis should not be interpreted as a "literal" description, but rather as a literary framework or allegory.
This position generally accepts the viewpoint of methodological naturalism, a long-standing convention of the scientific method in science.
Theistic evolutionists have frequently been prominent in opposing creationism (including intelligent design). Notable examples have been biologist Kenneth R. Miller and theologian John F. Haught, who testified for the plaintiffs in Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District. Another example is the Clergy Letter Project, an organization that has created and maintains a statement signed by American Christian clergy of different denominations rejecting creationism, with specific reference to points raised by intelligent design proponents. Theistic evolutionists have also been active in Citizens Alliances for Science that oppose the introduction of creationism into public school science classes (one example being evangelical Christian geologist Keith B. Miller, who is a prominent board member of Kansas Citizens for Science).
Agnostic evolution
Agnostic evolution is the position of acceptance of biological evolution, combined with the belief that it is not important whether God is, was, or will have been involved.[93]
Materialistic evolution
Materialistic evolution is the position of acceptance of biological evolution, combined with the position that the supernatural if it exists, has no influence on the material world (a position common to philosophical naturalists, humanists and atheists).[94] It is a view championed by the New Atheists, who argue strongly that the creationist viewpoint is not only dangerous, but is completely rejected by science.
Arguments relating to the definition and limits of science
Critiques such as those based on the distinction between theory and fact are often leveled against unifying concepts within scientific disciplines. Principles such as uniformitarianism, Occam's razor or parsimony, and the Copernican principle are claimed to be the result of a bias within science toward philosophical naturalism, which is equated by many creationists with atheism.[95] In countering this claim, philosophers of science use the term methodological naturalism to refer to the long-standing convention in science of the scientific method. The methodological assumption is that observable events in nature are explained only by natural causes, without assuming the existence or non-existence of the supernatural, and therefore supernatural explanations for such events are outside the realm of science.[96] Creationists claim that supernatural explanations should not be excluded and that scientific work is paradigmatically close-minded.[97]
Because modern science tries to rely on the minimization of a priori assumptions, error, and subjectivity, as well as on avoidance of Baconian idols, it remains neutral on subjective subjects such as religion or morality.[98] Mainstream proponents accuse the creationists of conflating the two in a form of pseudoscience.[99]
Definitions
According to the National Academy of Sciences, terms that are used in describing the nature of science include:
Fact: In science, an observation that has been repeatedly confirmed and for all practical purposes is accepted as "true." Truth in science, however, is never final, and what is accepted as a fact today may be modified or even discarded tomorrow.
Hypothesis: A tentative statement about the natural world leading to deductions that can be tested. If the deductions are verified, it becomes more probable that the hypothesis is correct. If the deductions are incorrect, the original hypothesis can be abandoned or modified. Hypotheses can be used to build more complex inferences and explanations.
Law: A descriptive generalization about how some aspect of the natural world behaves under stated circumstances.
Theory: In science, a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that can incorporate facts, laws, inferences, and tested hypotheses.
Limitations of scientific endeavor
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In science, explanations are limited to those based on observations and experiments that can be substantiated by other scientists. Explanations that cannot be based on empirical evidence are not a part of science.
The scientific method is a body of techniques for investigating phenomena, acquiring new knowledge, or correcting and integrating previous knowledge. To be termed scientific, a method of inquiry must be based on empirical and measurable evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning. What I believe in my heart must make sense in my mind. In other words, truth is not only a matter of offense, in that it makes certain assertions. It is also a matter of defense in that it must be able to make a cogent and sensible response to the counterpoints that are raised. Truth by definition excludes.
Theory vs. fact
The argument that evolution is a theory, not a fact, has often been made against the exclusive teaching of evolution.[100] The argument is related to a common misconception about the technical meaning of "theory" that is used by scientists. In common usage, "theory" often refers to conjectures, hypotheses, and unproven assumptions. In science, "theory" usually means "a plausible or scientifically acceptable general principle or body of principles offered to explain phenomena."[101]
Exploring this issue, paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould wrote:
Evolution is a theory. It is also a fact. And facts and theories are different things, not rungs in a hierarchy of increasing certainty. Facts are the world's data. Theories are structures of ideas that explain and interpret facts. Facts do not go away when scientists debate rival theories to explain them. Einstein's theory of gravitation replaced Newton's, but apples did not suspend themselves in mid-air, pending the outcome. And humans evolved from ape-like ancestors whether they did so by Darwin's proposed mechanism or by some other yet to be discovered.
Falsifiability
Philosopher of science Karl R. Popper set out the concept of falsifiability as a way to distinguish science and pseudoscience:[102][103] testable theories are scientific, but those that are untestable are not.[104] In Unended Quest, Popper declared "I have come to the conclusion that Darwinism is not a testable scientific theory but a metaphysical research programme, a possible framework for testable scientific theories," while pointing out it had "scientific character."[105]
In what one sociologist derisively called "Popper-chopping,"[106] opponents of evolution seized upon Popper's definition to claim evolution was not a science, and claimed creationism was an equally valid metaphysical research program.[107] For example, Duane Gish, a leading Creationist proponent, wrote in a letter to Discover magazine (July 1981): "Stephen Jay Gould states that creationists claim creation is a scientific theory. This is a false accusation. Creationists have repeatedly stated that neither creation nor evolution is a scientific theory (and each is equally religious)."[108]
Popper responded to news that his conclusions were being used by anti-evolutionary forces by affirming that evolutionary theories regarding the origins of life on earth were scientific because "their hypotheses can in many cases be tested."[109] Creationists claimed that a key evolutionary concept, that all life on Earth is descended from a single common ancestor, was not mentioned as testable by Popper, and claimed it never would be.[110]
In fact, Popper wrote admiringly of the value of Darwin's theory.[111] Only a few years later, Popper wrote, "I have in the past described the theory as 'almost tautological' ... I still believe that natural selection works in this way as a research programme. Nevertheless, I have changed my mind about the testability and logical status of the theory of natural selection; and I am glad to have an opportunity to make a recantation." His conclusion, later in the article is "The theory of natural selection may be so formulated that it is far from tautological. In this case it is not only testable, but it turns out to be not strictly universally true."[112]
Debate among some scientists and philosophers of science on the applicability of falsifiability in science continues.[113] Simple falsifiability tests for common descent have been offered by some scientists: for instance, biologist and prominent critic of creationism Richard Dawkins and J. B. S. Haldane both pointed out that if fossil rabbits were found in the Precambrian era, a time before most similarly complex lifeforms had evolved, "that would completely blow evolution out of the water."[114][115]
Falsifiability has caused problems for creationists: in his 1982 decision McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education, Judge William R. Overton used falsifiability as one basis for his ruling against the teaching of creation science in the public schools, ultimately declaring it "simply not science."[116]
Conflation of science and religion
Creationists commonly argue against evolution on the grounds that "evolution is a religion; it is not a science,"[117] in order to undermine the higher ground biologists claim in debating creationists, and to reframe the debate from being between science (evolution) and religion (creationism) to being between two equally religious beliefs—or even to argue that evolution is religious while intelligent design is not.[118][119] Those that oppose evolution frequently refer to supporters of evolution as "evolutionists" or "Darwinists."[117]
This is generally argued by analogy, by arguing that evolution and religion have one or more things in common, and that therefore evolution is a religion. Examples of claims made in such arguments are statements that evolution is based on faith, that supporters of evolution revere Darwin as a prophet, and that supporters of evolution dogmatically reject alternative suggestions out-of-hand.[120][121] These claims have become more popular in recent years as the neocreationist movement has sought to distance itself from religion, thus giving it more reason to make use of a seemingly anti-religious analogy.[122]
In response, supporters of evolution have argued that no scientist's claims, including Darwin's, are treated as sacrosanct, as shown by the aspects of Darwin's theory that have been rejected or revised by scientists over the years, to form first neo-Darwinism and later the modern evolutionary synthesis.[123][124]
Appeal to consequences
A number of creationists have blurred the boundaries between their disputes over the truth of the underlying facts, and explanatory theories, of evolution, with their purported philosophical and moral consequences. This type of argument is known as an appeal to consequences, and is a logical fallacy. Examples of these arguments include those of prominent creationists such as Ken Ham[125] and Henry M. Morris.[126]
Disputes relating to science
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Many creationists strongly oppose certain scientific theories in a number of ways, including opposition to specific applications of scientific processes, accusations of bias within the scientific community,[127] and claims that discussions within the scientific community reveal or imply a crisis. In response to perceived crises in modern science, creationists claim to have an alternative, typically based on faith, creation science, or intelligent design. The scientific community has responded by pointing out that their conversations are frequently misrepresented (e.g. by quote mining) in order to create the impression of a deeper controversy or crisis, and that the creationists' alternatives are generally pseudoscientific.
Biology
Disputes relating to evolutionary biology are central to the controversy between creationists and the scientific community. The aspects of evolutionary biology disputed include common descent (and particularly human evolution from common ancestors with other members of the great apes), macroevolution, and the existence of transitional fossils.
Common descent
[The] Discovery [Institute] presents common descent as controversial exclusively within the animal kingdom, as it focuses on embryology, anatomy, and the fossil record to raise questions about them. In the real world of science, common descent of animals is completely noncontroversial; any controversy resides in the microbial world. There, researchers argued over a variety of topics, starting with the very beginning, namely the relationship among the three main branches of life.
— John Timmer, Evolution: what's the real controversy?[128]
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A group of organisms is said to have common descent if they have a common ancestor. A theory of universal common descent based on evolutionary principles was proposed by Charles Darwin and is now generally accepted by biologists. The most recent common ancestor of all living organisms is believed to have appeared about 3.9 billion years ago. With a few exceptions (e.g. Michael Behe) the vast majority of creationists reject this theory in favor of the belief that a common design suggests a common designer (God), for all thirty million species.[129][130][131] Other creationists allow evolution of species, but say that it was specific "kinds" or baramin that were created. Thus all bear species may have developed from a common ancestor that was separately created.
Evidence of common descent includes evidence from genetics, fossil records, comparative anatomy, geographical distribution of species, comparative physiology and comparative biochemistry.
Human evolution
Human evolution is the study of the biological evolution of humans as a distinct species from its common ancestors with other animals. Analysis of fossil evidence and genetic distance are two of the means by which scientists understand this evolutionary history.
Fossil evidence suggests that humans' earliest hominid ancestors may have split from other primates as early as the late Oligocene, circa 26 to 24 Ma, and that by the early Miocene, the adaptive radiation of many different hominoid forms was well underway.[132] Evidence from the molecular dating of genetic differences indicates that the gibbon lineage (family Hylobatidae) diverged between 18 and 12 Ma, and the orangutan lineage (subfamily Ponginae) diverged about 12 Ma. While there is no fossil evidence thus far clearly documenting the early ancestry of gibbons, fossil proto-orangutans may be represented by Sivapithecus from India and Griphopithecus from Turkey, dated to around 10 Ma. Molecular evidence further suggests that between 8 and 4 Ma, first the gorillas, and then the chimpanzee (genus Pan) split from the line leading to the humans.[133] We have no fossil record of this divergence, but distinctively hominid fossils have been found dating to 3.2 Ma (see Lucy) and possibly even earlier, at 6 or 7 Ma (see Toumaï).[134] Comparisons of DNA show that 99.4 percent of the coding regions are identical in chimpanzees and humans (95–96% overall[135][136]), which is taken as strong evidence of recent common ancestry.[137] Today, only one distinct human species survives, but many earlier species have been found in the fossil record, including Homo erectus, Homo habilis, and Homo neanderthalensis.
Creationists dispute there is evidence of shared ancestry in the fossil evidence, and argue either that these are misassigned ape fossils (e.g. that Java Man was a gibbon[138]) or too similar to modern humans to designate them as distinct or transitional forms.[139] Creationists frequently disagree where the dividing lines would be.[140] Creation myths (such as the Book of Genesis) frequently posit a first man (Adam, in the case of Genesis) as an alternative viewpoint to the scientific account.
Creationists also dispute science's interpretation of genetic evidence in the study of human evolution. They argue that it is a "dubious assumption" that genetic similarities between various animals imply a common ancestral relationship, and that scientists are coming to this interpretation only because they have preconceived notions that such shared relationships exist. Creationists also argue that genetic mutations are strong evidence against evolutionary theory because the mutations required for major changes to occur would almost certainly be detrimental.[58]
Macroevolution
In biology, macroevolution refers to evolution above the species level while microevolution refers to changes within species. However, there is no fundamental distinction between these processes; small changes compound over time and eventually lead to speciation.[141] Creationists argue that a finite number of discrete kinds were created, as described in the Book of Genesis, and these kinds determine the limits of variation.[142] Early Creationists equated kinds with species, but most now accept that speciation can occur: not only is the evidence overwhelming for speciation, but the millions of species now in existence could not have fit in Noah's Ark.[143] Created kinds identified by creationists are more generally on the level of the family (for example, Canidae), but the genus Homo is a separate kind. A Creationist systematics called Baraminology builds on the idea of created kind, calling it a baramin. While evolutionary systematics is used to explore relationships between organisms by descent, baraminology attempts to find discontinuities between groups of organisms. It employs many of the tools of evolutionary systematics, but Biblical criteria for taxonomy take precedence over all other criteria.[144] This undermines their claim to objectivity: they accept evidence for the common ancestry of cats or dogs but not analogous evidence for the common ancestry of apes and humans.[144]
Recent arguments against macroevolution (in the Creationist sense) include the intelligent design (ID) arguments of irreducible complexity and specified complexity. Neither argument has been accepted for publication in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, and both arguments have been rejected by the scientific community as pseudoscience. When taken to court in an attempt to introduce ID into the classroom, the judge wrote "The overwhelming evidence at trial established that ID is a religious view, a mere re-labeling of creationism, and not a scientific theory."
Transitional fossils
It is commonly stated by critics of evolution that there are no known transitional fossils.[145][146] This position is based on a misunderstanding of the nature of what represents a transitional feature. A common creationist argument is that no fossils are found with partially functional features. It is plausible that a complex feature with one function can adapt a different function through evolution. The precursor to, for example, a wing, might originally have only been used for gliding, trapping flying prey, or mating display. Today, wings can still have all of these functions, but they are also used in active flight.
As another example, Alan Hayward stated in Creation and Evolution (1985) that "Darwinists rarely mention the whale because it presents them with one of their most insoluble problems. They believe that somehow a whale must have evolved from an ordinary land-dwelling animal, which took to the sea and lost its legs ... A land mammal that was in the process of becoming a whale would fall between two stools—it would not be fitted for life on land or at sea, and would have no hope for survival."[147] The evolution of whales has been documented in considerable detail, with Ambulocetus, described as looking like a three-metre long mammalian crocodile, as one of the transitional fossils.[148]
Although transitional fossils elucidate the evolutionary transition of one life-form to another, they only exemplify snapshots of this process. Due to the special circumstances required for preservation of living beings, only a very small percentage of all life-forms that ever have existed can be expected to be discovered. Thus, the transition itself can only be illustrated and corroborated by transitional fossils, but it will never be known in detail. Progressing research and discovery managed to fill in several gaps and continues to do so. Critics of evolution often cite this argument as being a convenient way to explain off the lack of 'snapshot' fossils that show crucial steps between species.
The theory of punctuated equilibrium developed by Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge is often mistakenly drawn into the discussion of transitional fossils. This theory pertains only to well-documented transitions within taxa or between closely related taxa over a geologically short period. These transitions, usually traceable in the same geological outcrop, often show small jumps in morphology between periods of morphological stability. To explain these jumps, Gould and Eldredge envisaged comparatively long periods of genetic stability separated by periods of rapid evolution. For example, the change from a creature the size of a mouse, to one the size of an elephant, could be accomplished over 60,000 years, with a rate of change too small to be noticed over any human lifetime. 60,000 years is too small a gap to be identified or identifiable in the fossil record.[149]
Experts in evolutionary theory have pointed out that even if it were possible for enough fossils to survive to show a close transitional change critics will never be satisfied, as the discovery of one "missing link" itself creates two more so-called "missing links" on either side of the discovery. Richard Dawkins says that the reason for this "losing battle" is that many of these critics are theists who "simply don't want to see the truth."
Geology
Many believers in young Earth creationism – a position held by the majority of proponents of flood geology – accept biblical chronogenealogies (such as the Ussher chronology, which in turn is based on the Masoretic version of the Genealogies of Genesis).[150][undue weight? – discuss][151] They believe that God created the universe approximately 6000 years ago, in the space of six days. Much of creation geology is devoted to debunking the dating methods used in anthropology, geology, and planetary science that give ages in conflict with the young Earth idea. In particular, creationists dispute the reliability of radiometric dating and isochron analysis, both of which are central to mainstream geological theories of the age of the Earth. They usually dispute these methods based on uncertainties concerning initial concentrations of individually considered species and the associated measurement uncertainties caused by diffusion of the parent and daughter isotopes. A full critique of the entire parameter-fitting analysis, which relies on dozens of radionuclei parent and daughter pairs, has not been done by creationists hoping to cast doubt on the technique.
The consensus of professional scientific organisations worldwide is that no scientific evidence contradicts the age of approximately 4.5 billion years.[1] Young Earth creationists reject these ages on the grounds of what they regard as being tenuous and untestable assumptions in the methodology. They have often quoted apparently inconsistent radiometric dates to cast doubt on the utility and accuracy of the method. Mainstream proponents who get involved in this debate point out that dating methods only rely on the assumptions that the physical laws governing radioactive decay have not been violated since the sample was formed (harking back to Lyell's doctrine of uniformitarianism). They also point out that the "problems" that creationists publicly mentioned can be shown to either not be problems at all, are issues with known contamination, or simply the result of incorrectly evaluating legitimate data. The fact that the various methods of dating give essentially identical or near identical readings is not addressed in creationism.
Other sciences
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Cosmology
While young Earth creationists believe that the Universe was created by the Judeo-Christian God approximately 6000 years ago, the current scientific consensus is that the Universe as we know it emerged from the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago. The recent science of nucleocosmochronology is extending the approaches used for carbon-14 and other radiometric dating to the dating of astronomical features. For example, based upon this emerging science, the Galactic thin disk of the Milky Way galaxy is estimated to have been formed 8.3 ± 1.8 billion years ago.[152]
Nuclear physics
Creationists point to experiments they have performed, which they claim demonstrate that 1.5 billion years of nuclear decay took place over a short period, from which they infer that "billion-fold speed-ups of nuclear decay" have occurred, a massive violation of the principle that radioisotope decay rates are constant, a core principle underlying nuclear physics generally, and radiometric dating in particular.[153]
The scientific community points to numerous flaws in these experiments, to the fact that their results have not been accepted for publication by any peer-reviewed scientific journal, and to the fact that the creationist scientists conducting them were untrained in experimental geochronology.[154][155]
In refutation of young Earth claims of inconstant decay-rates affecting the reliability of radiometric dating, Roger C. Wiens, a physicist specialising in isotope dating states:
There are only three quite technical instances where a half-life changes, and these do not affect the dating methods [under discussion]":[156]
- Only one technical exception occurs under terrestrial conditions, and this is not for an isotope used for dating.... The artificially-produced isotope, beryllium-7 has been shown to change by up to 1.5%, depending on its chemical environment. ... [H]eavier atoms are even less subject to these minute changes, so the dates of rocks made by electron-capture decays would only be off by at most a few hundredths of a percent.
- ... Another case is material inside of stars, which is in a plasma state where electrons are not bound to atoms. In the extremely hot stellar environment, a completely different kind of decay can occur. 'Bound-state beta decay' occurs when the nucleus emits an electron into a bound electronic state close to the nucleus.... All normal matter, such as everything on Earth, the Moon, meteorites, etc. has electrons in normal positions, so these instances never apply to rocks, or anything colder than several hundred thousand degrees....
- The last case also involves very fast-moving matter. It has been demonstrated by atomic clocks in very fast spacecraft. These atomic clocks slow down very slightly (only a second or so per year) as predicted by Einstein's theory of relativity. No rocks in our solar system are going fast enough to make a noticeable change in their dates....
— Roger C. Wiens, Radiometric Dating, A Christian Perspective[157]
Misrepresentations of science
The Discovery Institute has a "formal declaration" titled A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism which has many evangelicals, people from fields irrelevant to biology and geology and few biologists. Many of the biologists who signed have fields not directly related to evolution.[158] Some of the biologists signed were deceived into signing the "declaration." In response, there is Project Steve.
Quote mining
As a means to criticise mainstream science, creationists have been known to quote, at length, scientists who ostensibly support the mainstream theories, but appear to acknowledge criticisms similar to those of creationists.[62] Almost universally these have been shown to be quote mines that do not accurately reflect the evidence for evolution or the mainstream scientific community's opinion of it, or are highly out-of-date.[159][160] Many of the same quotes used by creationists have appeared so frequently in Internet discussions due to the availability of cut and paste functions, that the TalkOrigins Archive has created "The Quote Mine Project" for quick reference to the original context of these quotations.[159] Creationists often quote mine Darwin, especially with regard to the seeming improbability of the evolution of the eye, to give support to their views.[161]
The Panda's Thumb blog has some material on quote mining.[162]
Public policy issues
The creation–evolution controversy has grown in importance in recent years, particularly as a result of the Southern strategy of the Republican Party strategist Kevin Phillips, during the Nixon and Reagan administrations in the U.S. He saw that the African-American Civil Rights Movement had alienated many poor white southern voters of the Bible Belt and set out to capture this electorate through an alliance with the "New Right" Christian right movement.[163]
Science education
Creationists promoted the idea that evolution is a theory in crisis[2][80] with scientists criticizing evolution[164] and claim that fairness and equal time requires educating students about the alleged scientific controversy.
Opponents, being the overwhelming majority of the scientific community and science education organizations,[165] reply that there is no scientific controversy and that the controversy exists solely in terms of religion and politics.[2][164]
George Mason University Biology Department introduced a course on the creation/evolution controversy, and apparently as students learn more about biology, they find objections to evolution less convincing, suggesting that "teaching the controversy" rightly as a separate elective course on philosophy or history of science, or "politics of science and religion," would undermine creationists' criticisms, and that the scientific community's resistance to this approach was bad public relations.[166]
Freedom of speech
Creationists have claimed that preventing them from teaching creationism violates their right of freedom of speech. Court cases (such as Webster v. New Lenox School District (1990) and Bishop v. Aronov (1991)) have upheld school districts' and universities' right to restrict teaching to a specified curriculum.
Issues relating to religion
Religion and historical scientists
Creationists often argue that Christianity and literal belief in the Bible are either foundationally significant or directly responsible for scientific progress.[167] To that end, Institute for Creation Research founder Henry M. Morris has enumerated scientists such as astronomer and philosopher Galileo Galilei, mathematician and theoretical physicist James Clerk Maxwell, mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal, geneticist monk Gregor Mendel, and Isaac Newton as believers in a biblical creation narrative.[168]
This argument usually involves scientists who were no longer alive when evolution was proposed or whose field of study did not include evolution. The argument is generally rejected as specious by those who oppose creationism.[169]
Many of the scientists in question did some early work on the mechanisms of evolution, e.g., the modern evolutionary synthesis combines Darwin's theory of evolution with Mendel's theories of inheritance and genetics. Though biological evolution of some sort had become the primary mode of discussing speciation within science by the late-19th century, it was not until the mid-20th century that evolutionary theories stabilized into the modern synthesis. Geneticist and evolutionary biologist Theodosius Dobzhansky, called the Father of the Modern Synthesis, argued that "Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution," and saw no conflict between evolutionary and his religious beliefs.[170] Nevertheless, some of the historical scientists marshalled by creationists were dealing with quite different issues than any are engaged with today: Louis Pasteur, for example, opposed the theory of spontaneous generation with biogenesis, an advocacy some creationists describe as a critique on chemical evolution and abiogenesis. Pasteur accepted that some form of evolution had occurred and that the Earth was millions of years old.[171]
The Relationship between religion and science was not portrayed in antagonistic terms until the late-19th century, and even then there have been many examples of the two being reconcilable for evolutionary scientists.[172] Many historical scientists wrote books explaining how pursuit of science was seen by them as fulfillment of spiritual duty in line with their religious beliefs. Even so, such professions of faith were not insurance against dogmatic opposition by certain religious people.
Forums
Debates
Many creationists and scientists engage in frequent public debates regarding the origin of human life, hosted by a variety of institutions. However, some scientists disagree with this tactic, arguing that by openly debating supporters of supernatural origin explanations (creationism and intelligent design), scientists are lending credibility and unwarranted publicity to creationists, which could foster an inaccurate public perception and obscure the factual merits of the debate.[173] For example, in May 2004 Dr. Michael Shermer debated creationist Kent Hovind in front of a predominantly creationist audience. In Shermer's online reflection while he was explaining that he won the debate with intellectual and scientific evidence he felt it was "not an intellectual exercise," but rather it was "an emotional drama," with scientists arguing from "an impregnable fortress of evidence that converges to an unmistakable conclusion," while for creationists it is "a spiritual war."[174] While receiving positive responses from creationist observers, Shermer concluded "Unless there is a subject that is truly debatable (evolution v. creation is not), with a format that is fair, in a forum that is balanced, it only serves to belittle both the magisterium of science and the magisterium of religion."[174] (see Non-overlapping magisteria). Others, like evolutionary biologist Massimo Pigliucci, have debated Hovind, and have expressed surprise to hear Hovind try "to convince the audience that evolutionists believe humans came from rocks" and at Hovind's assertion that biologists believe humans "evolved from bananas."[175]
In September 2012, educator and television personality Bill Nye of Bill Nye the Science Guy fame spoke with the Associated Press and aired his fears about acceptance of creationist theory, believing that teaching children that creationism is the only true answer and without letting them understand the way science works will prevent any future innovation in the world of science.[176][177] In February 2014, Nye defended evolution in the classroom in a debate with creationist Ken Ham on the topic of whether creation is a viable model of origins in today's modern, scientific era.[178][179][180]
Eugenie Scott of the National Center for Science Education, a nonprofit organization dedicated to defending the teaching of evolution in the public schools, claimed debates are not the sort of arena to promote science to creationists.[174] Scott says that "Evolution is not on trial in the world of science," and "the topic of the discussion should not be the scientific legitimacy of evolution" but rather should be on the lack of evidence in creationism. Stephen Jay Gould adopted a similar position, explaining:
Debate is an art form. It is about the winning of arguments. It is not about the discovery of truth. There are certain rules and procedures to debate that really have nothing to do with establishing fact—which [creationists] are very good at. Some of those rules are: never say anything positive about your own position because it can be attacked, but chip away at what appear to be the weaknesses in your opponent's position. They are good at that. I don't think I could beat the creationists at debate. I can tie them. But in courtrooms they are terrible, because in courtrooms you cannot give speeches. In a courtroom you have to answer direct questions about the positive status of your belief.
— Stephen Jay Gould, lecture 1985[181]
Political lobbying
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On both sides of the controversy a wide range of organizations are involved at a number of levels in lobbying in an attempt to influence political decisions relating to the teaching of evolution. These include the Discovery Institute, the National Center for Science Education, the National Science Teachers Association, state Citizens Alliances for Science, and numerous national science associations and state academies of science.[182]
Media coverage
The controversy has been discussed in numerous newspaper articles, reports, op-eds and letters to the editor, as well as a number of radio and television programmes (including the PBS series, Evolution (2001) and Coral Ridge Ministries' Darwin's Deadly Legacy (2006)). This has led some commentators to express a concern at what they see as a highly inaccurate and biased understanding of evolution among the general public. Edward Humes states:
There are really two theories of evolution. There is the genuine scientific theory and there is the talk-radio pretend version, designed not to enlighten but to deceive and enrage. The talk-radio version had a packed town hall up in arms at the Why Evolution Is Stupid lecture. In this version of the theory, scientists supposedly believe that all life is accidental, a random crash of molecules that magically produced flowers, horses and humans – a scenario as unlikely as a tornado in a junkyard assembling a 747. Humans come from monkeys in this theory, just popping into existence one day. The evidence against Darwin is overwhelming, the purveyors of talk-radio evolution rail, yet scientists embrace his ideas because they want to promote atheism.
— Edward Humes, Unintelligent Designs on Darwin[183]
Outside the United States
While the controversy has been prominent in the United States, it has flared up in other countries as well.[186][187][188]
Europe
Europeans have often regarded the creation–evolution controversy as an American matter.[187] In recent years the conflict has become an issue in other countries including Germany, the United Kingdom, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Turkey and Serbia.[187][188][189][190][191]
On September 17, 2007, the Committee on Culture, Science and Education of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) issued a report on the attempt by American-inspired creationists to promote creationism in European schools. It concludes "If we are not careful, creationism could become a threat to human rights which are a key concern of the Council of Europe... The war on the theory of evolution and on its proponents most often originates in forms of religious extremism which are closely allied to extreme right-wing political movements... some advocates of strict creationism are out to replace democracy by theocracy."[192] The Council of Europe firmly rejected creationism.[193]
Australia
Under the former Queensland state government of Joh Bjelke-Petersen, in the 1980s Queensland allowed the teaching of creationism in secondary schools.[194] In 2010, the Queensland state government introduced the topic of creationism into school classes within the "ancient history" subject where its origins and nature are discussed as a significant controversy.[195] Public lectures have been given in rented rooms at universities, by visiting American speakers.[196][page needed] One of the most acrimonious aspects of the Australian debate was featured on the science television program Quantum, about a long-running and ultimately unsuccessful court case by Ian Plimer, Professor of Geology at the University of Melbourne, against an ordained minister, Dr. Allen Roberts, who had claimed that there were remnants of Noah's Ark in eastern Turkey. Although the court found that Roberts had made false and misleading claims, they were not made in the course of trade or commerce, so the case failed.[197]
Islamic countries
In recent times, the controversy has become more prominent in Islamic countries.[198] In Egypt, evolution is currently taught in schools, but Saudi Arabia and Sudan have both banned the teaching of evolution in schools.[186][18] Creation science has also been heavily promoted in Turkey and in immigrant communities in Western Europe, primarily by Harun Yahya.[188] In Iran, traditional practice of Shia Islam isn't preoccupied with Qur'anic literalism as in case of Saudi Wahhabism but ijtihad, many influential Iranian Shi'ite scholars, including several who were closely involved in Iranian Revolution, are not opposed to evolutionary ideas in general, disagreeing that evolution necessarily conflicts with the Muslim mainstream.[18] Iranian pupils since 5th grade of elementary school learn only about evolution, thus portraying geologists and scientists in general as an authoritative voices of scientific knowledge.[18]
See also
- Anti-intellectualism
- Clergy Letter Project
- Creation and evolution in public education
- Evolutionary origin of religions
- Hindu views on evolution
- History of the creation–evolution controversy
- Jainism and non-creationism
- Jewish views on evolution
- Mormon views on evolution
- Objections to evolution
- Project Steve
- Relationship between religion and science
- Stereotypes of Americans
- TalkOrigins
- Teach the Controversy
- Theology of creationism and evolution
References
- ^ a b IAP Member Academies (June 21, 2006). "IAP Statement on the Teaching of Evolution". IAP. Trieste, Italy: The World Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ a b c d "Statement on the Teaching of Evolution" (PDF). Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science. February 16, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-02-21. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
Some bills seek to discredit evolution by emphasizing so-called 'flaws' in the theory of evolution or 'disagreements' within the scientific community. Others insist that teachers have absolute freedom within their classrooms and cannot be disciplined for teaching non-scientific 'alternatives' to evolution. A number of bills require that students be taught to 'critically analyze' evolution or to understand 'the controversy.' But there is no significant controversy within the scientific community about the validity of the theory of evolution. The current controversy surrounding the teaching of evolution is not a scientific one.
- ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Whether ID Is Science, p. 83.
- ^ a b Larson 2004, p. 258: "Virtually no secular scientists accepted the doctrines of creation science; but that did not deter creation scientists from advancing scientific arguments for their position."
- ^ Skoog, Gerald (2007). "An NSTA Evolution Q&A". National Science Teachers Association. Arlington, VA: National Science Teachers Association. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Numbers 1992, pp. 3–240
- ^ Montgomery, David R. (November 2012). "The evolution of creationism" (PDF). GSA Today. 22 (11). Geological Society of America: 4–9. doi:10.1130/GSATG158A.1. Retrieved 2016-01-28.
- ^ a b Peters, Ted; Hewlett, Martinez (December 22, 2005). "The Evolution Controversy: Who's Fighting with Whom about What?" (PDF). Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary. Berkeley, CA: Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary. Evolution Brief E2. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Context, p. 20.
- ^ Slevin, Peter (March 14, 2005). "Battle on Teaching Evolution Sharpens". The Washington Post. p. A01. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Renka, Russell D. (November 16, 2005). "The Political Design of Intelligent Design". Renka's Home Page. Round Rock, TX. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Wilgoren, Jodi (August 21, 2005). "Politicized Scholars Put Evolution on the Defensive". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite news}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Forrest, Barbara (April 2002). "The Newest Evolution of Creationism". Natural History. 111 (3). Research Triangle Park, NC: Natural History Magazine, Inc.: 80. ISSN 0028-0712. Retrieved 2014-06-06.
- ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Introduction, pp. 7–9, also Whether ID Is Science, pp. 64–89, and Promoting Religion, p. 90.
- ^ Curry, Andrew (February 27, 2009). "Creationist Beliefs Persist in Europe". Science. 323 (5918). Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science: 1159. doi:10.1126/science.323.5918.1159. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 19251601.
News coverage of the creationism-versus-evolution debate tends to focus on the United States ... But in the past 5 years, political clashes over the issue have also occurred in countries all across Europe. ... 'This isn't just an American problem,' says Dittmar Graf of the Technical University of Dortmund, who organized the meeting.
- ^ Larson 2004, pp. 247–263, Chapter 11: "Modern Culture Wars"
- Ruse 1999, p. 26: "One thing that historians delighted in showing is that, contrary to the usually held tale of science and religion being always opposed [Conflict thesis] ... religion and theologically inclined philosophy have frequently been very significant factors in the forward movement of science."
- ^ Cantor, Geoffrey and Marc Swetlitz, (editors). Jewish Tradition and the Challenge of Darwinism. University of Chicago Press. 2006. ISBN 978-0-226-09276-8
- ^ a b c d Burton, Elise K. (May–June 2010). "Teaching Evolution in Muslim States:Iran and Saudi Arabia Compared". Reports of the National Center for Science Education. 30 (3). Berkeley, CA: National Center for Science Education: 25–29. ISSN 2158-818X. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
- ^ McKenna, Josephine (October 28, 2014). "Pope says evolution, Big Bang are real". USA Today. Tysons Corner, VA: Gannett Company. Religion News Service. Retrieved 2016-01-28.
- ^ Gordon, Kara (October 30, 2014). "The Pope's Views on Evolution Haven't Really Evolved". The Atlantic. Washington, D.C.: Atlantic Media. ISSN 1072-7825. Retrieved 2016-01-28.
- ^ Newport, Frank (June 2, 2014). "In U.S., 42% Believe Creationist View of Human Origins". Gallup.Com. Omaha, NE: Gallup, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-02.
- ^ NAS 2008, p. 12
- ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, pp. 34–35
- ^ van Wyhe, John (2006). "Charles Darwin: gentleman naturalist". The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online. John van Wyhe. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite web}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, pp. 321–323, 503–505
- ^ Dixon 2008, p. 77
- ^ van Wyhe 2006
- ^ Hale, Piers (July 2012). "Darwin's Other Bulldog: Charles Kingsley and the Popularisation of Evolution in Victorian England" (PDF). Science & Education. 21 (7). Netherlands: Springer Science+Business Media: 977–1013. Bibcode:2012Sc&Ed..21..977H. doi:10.1007/s11191-011-9414-8. ISSN 0926-7220. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ a b c d AAAS 2006
- ^ Baxter, Craig; Darwin Correspondence Project (research collaborator). "Re: Design". Darwin Correspondence Project (Dramatisation script). Cambridge, England: University of Cambridge. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite web}}
:|author2=
has generic name (help)- "Dramatisation of the correspondence". Darwin Correspondence Project. Cambridge, England: University of Cambridge. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Gray 1876
- ^ Hodge 1874, p. 177
- ^ Numbers 1992, p. 14
- ^ Burns et al. 1982, p. 965
- ^ Huxley 1902
- ^ a b Witham 2002
- ^ Barbour 1997, pp. 58, 65
- ^ Numbers 1992, pp. 13–15
- ^ a b Numbers 1992, p. 17
- ^ Numbers 1992, p. 18, noting that this applies to published or public skeptics. Many Christians may have held on to a literal six days of creation,[original research?] but these views rarely found expression in books and journals. Exceptions are also noted[by whom?], such as literal interpretations published by Eleazar Lord (1788–1871), David Nevins Lord (1792–1880), and E. G. White (1829–1915). The observation that evolutionary critics had a relaxed interpretation of Genesis is supported by specifically enumerating: Louis Agassiz (1807–1873); Arnold Henry Guyot (1807–1884); John William Dawson (1820–1899); Enoch Fitch Burr (1818–1907); George D. Armstrong (1813–1899); Charles Hodge, theologian (1797–1878); James Dwight Dana (1813–1895); Edward Hitchcock, clergyman and Amherst College geologist, (1793–1864); Reverend Herbert W. Morris (1818–1897); H. L. Hastings (1833?–1899); Luther T. Townsend (1838–1922; Alexander Patterson, Presbyterian evangelist.
- ^ Salhany 1986, p. 32
- ^ a b Numbers 2006, p. 161
- ^ Withnall, Adam. "Pope Francis declares evolution and Big Bang theory are real and God is not 'a magician with a magic wand'". Independent.co.uk. The Independent. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
- ^ Buescher, John. "A History of Fundamentalism". Teachinghistory.org. Fairfax, VA: George Mason University; United States Department of Education. Retrieved 2011-08-15.
- ^ Nagata, Judith (June 2001). "Beyond Theology: Toward an Anthropology of 'Fundamentalism'". American Anthropologist. 103 (2). Arlington, VA: American Anthropological Association: 481–498. doi:10.1525/aa.2001.103.2.481. JSTOR 683478.
- ^ a b Numbers 2006, p. 162
- ^ Numbers 2006, pp. 355–356
- ^ Salhany 1986, p. 32–34
- ^ Similar legislation was passed in two other states prior to the Scopes trial, in Oklahoma and Florida. The efforts to enact "Butler Acts" in other jurisdictions were abandoned after the Scopes trial. See:
- Pierce, J. Kingston (August 2000). "Scopes Trial". American History. Leesburg, VA: Weider History Group. ISSN 1076-8866. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite journal}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) Describes the Florida and Oklahoma acts. - Cole, Fay-Cooper (December 31, 2008) [Originally published January 1959]. "50 Years Ago: A Witness at the Scopes Trial". Scientific American. Stuttgart, Germany: Georg von Holtzbrinck Publishing Group. ISSN 0036-8733. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite web}}
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(help)
- Pierce, J. Kingston (August 2000). "Scopes Trial". American History. Leesburg, VA: Weider History Group. ISSN 1076-8866. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ "Decision on Scopes' Appeal to the Supreme Court of Tennessee". University of Missouri–Kansas City School of Law (Primary source). Kansas City, MO: Curators of the University of Missouri. January 17, 1927. Retrieved 2014-08-27. The statute required a minimum fine of $100, and the state Constitution required all fines over $50 to be assessed by a jury.
- ^ The Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution was not, at the time of the Scopes decision in the 1920s, deemed applicable to the states. Thus, Scopes' constitutional defense on establishment grounds rested solely on the state constitution. See:
- Court Opinion of Scope's Trial 1927. See generally Incorporation doctrine and Everson v. Board of Education (seminal U.S. Supreme Court opinion finally applying the Establishment Clause against states in 1947).
- Kerr, Orin (July 26, 2005). "State v. Scopes". The Volokh Conspiracy (Book review). Los Angeles, CA: UCLA School of Law.
The constitutional case was largely based on state constitutional law; this was before most of the Bill of Rights had been incorporated and applied to the states.
{{cite web}}
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(help) Review of Edward J. Larson's book Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial and America’s Continuing Debate Over Science and Religion (1997).- Cantwell v. Connecticut. 1940 Supreme Court case stating that the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment is incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment and is therefore applicable against the states.
- Cookson 2003, p. 132 . Explains incorporation doctrine relative to First Amendment.
- "BRIA 7 4 b The 14th Amendment and the 'Second Bill of Rights'". Constitutional Rights Foundation. Los Angeles, CA: Constitutional Rights Foundation. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ The Court accordingly did not address the question of whether the teaching of creationism in the public schools was unconstitutional.
- ^ Court Opinion of Scope's Trial 1927. The Court stated in its opinion that "England and Scotland maintained State churches as did some of the Colonies, and it was intended by this clause of the Constitution [the Religious Preference Clause] to prevent any such undertaking in Tennessee."
- ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Context, p. 19.
- ^ Forrest, Barbara (May 2007). "Understanding the Intelligent Design Creationist Movement: Its True Nature and Goals" (PDF). Center for Inquiry. Washington, D.C.: Center for Inquiry. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite web}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Flank, Lenny (March 2006). "The History of Creationism". TalkOrigins Archive (Post of the Month). Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite web}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Elsberry, Wesley R. "The Scopes Trial: Frequently Rebutted Assertions". AntiEvolution.org. Palmetto, FL: Wesley R. Elsberry. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ a b Nelkin 2000, p. 242
- ^ *Epperson v. Arkansas, 393 U.S. 97 (U.S. November 12, 1968).
- ^ Larson 2003, p. 103
- ^ Larson 2004, pp. 248, 250
- ^ a b Dobzhansky, Theodosius (March 1973). "Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution". The American Biology Teacher. 35 (3). McLean, VA: National Association of Biology Teachers: 125–129. doi:10.2307/4444260.
{{cite journal}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Larson 2004, p. 251
- ^ Larson 2004, p. 252
- ^ a b Larson 2004, p. 255
- ^ Numbers 1992, pp. xi, 200–208
- ^ Numbers 1992, pp. 284–285
- ^ Numbers 1992, pp. 284–286
- ^ Larson 2004, pp. 255–256: "Fundamentalists no longer merely denounced Darwinism as false; they offered a scientific-sounding alternative of their own, which they called either 'scientific creationism (as distinct from religious creationism) or 'creation science' (as opposed to evolution science)."
- ^ Larson 2004, pp. 254–255
- ^ Numbers 1998, pp. 5–6
- ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Introduction, pp. 7–9.
- ^ "Evolving Banners at the Discovery Institute". National Center for Science Education. Berkeley, CA: National Center for Science Education. August 28, 2002. Retrieved 2009-04-07.
- ^ "CSC - Top Questions: Questions About Intelligent Design: What is the theory of intelligent design?". Center for Science and Culture. Seattle, WA: Discovery Institute. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ^ "Some question group's move with elections nearing". 6 News Lawrence. Lawrence, KS: 6News Lawrence; Lawrence Journal-World. July 7, 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-07-14.
{{cite news}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ "Evolution's foes lose ground in Kansas". NBCNews.com. Associated Press. August 2, 2006. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ "Evolution of Kansas science standards continues as Darwin's theories regain prominence". International Herald Tribune. New York: The New York Times Company. Associated Press. February 13, 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-05-25. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ "Timeline: How Creationism Has 'Evolved'". People for the American Way. Washington, D.C.: People for the American Way. 2006. Retrieved 2012-05-01.
- ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Curriculum, Conclusion, p. 136.
- ^ a b c Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Whether ID Is Science, p. 89, support the view that "ID's backers have sought to avoid the scientific scrutiny which we have now determined that it cannot withstand by advocating that the controversy, but not ID itself, should be taught in science class. This tactic is at best disingenuous, and at worst a canard. The goal of the IDM is not to encourage critical thought, but to foment a revolution which would supplant evolutionary theory with ID."
- ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Disclaimer, p. 49: "In summary, the disclaimer singles out the theory of evolution for special treatment, misrepresents its status in the scientific community, causes students to doubt its validity without scientific justification, presents students with a religious alternative masquerading as a scientific theory, directs them to consult a creationist text as though it were a science resource, and instructs students to forgo scientific inquiry in the public school classroom and instead to seek out religious instruction elsewhere."
- ^ Mooney, Chris (December 2002). "Survival of the Slickest". The American Prospect. 13 (22). Washington, D.C. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
ID's home base is the Center for Science and Culture at Seattle's conservative Discovery Institute. Meyer directs the center; former Reagan adviser Bruce Chapman heads the larger institute, with input from the Christian supply-sider and former American Spectator owner George Gilder (also a Discovery senior fellow). From this perch, the ID crowd has pushed a 'teach the controversy' approach to evolution that closely influenced the Ohio State Board of Education's recently proposed science standards, which would require students to learn how scientists 'continue to investigate and critically analyze' aspects of Darwin's theory.
- ^ Dembski, William A. (February 27, 2001). "Teaching Intelligent Design -- What Happened When? A Response to Eugenie Scott". Metanexus. New York: Metanexus Institute. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
The clarion call of the intelligent design movement is to 'teach the controversy.' There is a very real controversy centering on how properly to account for biological complexity (cf. the ongoing events in Kansas), and it is a scientific controversy.
Dembski's response to Eugenie Scott's February 12, 2001, essay published by Metanexus, "The Big Tent and the Camel's Nose." - ^ Matzke, Nick (July 11, 2006). "No one here but us Critical Analysis-ists…". The Panda's Thumb (Blog). Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-05-05. Nick Matzke's analysis shows how teaching the controversy using the Critical Analysis of Evolution model lesson plan is a means of teaching all the intelligent design arguments without using the intelligent design label.
- ^ Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Curriculum, Conclusion, p. 134.
- ^ Bhattacharjee, Yudhijit (April 3, 2009). "New Texas Standards Question Evolution, Fossil Record". Science. 324 (5923). Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science: 25. Bibcode:2009Sci...324...25B. doi:10.1126/science.324.5923.25a. ISSN 0036-8075. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Verderame, John (May 10, 2001). "Creation Evangelism: Cutting Through the Excess". Answers in Genesis. Hebron, KY: Answers in Genesis Ministries International. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Simon, Stephanie (February 11, 2006). "Their Own Version of a Big Bang". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Dewey 1994, p. 31, and Wiker 2003, summarizing Gould.
- ^ Martz & McDaniel 1987
- ^ "Statement from the Council of the Biological Society of Washington". Biological Society of Washington. Washington, D.C.: Biological Society of Washington. October 4, 2004. Archived from the original on 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Bumiller, Elisabeth (August 3, 2005). "Bush Remarks Roil Debate on Teaching of Evolution". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-02-03.
- ^ Scott 2005, p. 65
- ^ Scott 2005, pp. 65–66
- ^ Johnson 1998; Hodge 1874, p. 177; Wiker 2003; Peters & Hewlett 2005, p. 5. Peters and Hewlett argue that the atheism of many evolutionary supporters must be removed from the debate.
- ^ Lenski, Richard E. (September 2000). "Evolution: Fact and Theory". actionbioscience. Washington, D.C.: American Institute of Biological Sciences. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Johnson 1998
- ^ Einstein, Albert (November 9, 1930). "Religion and Science". The New York Times Magazine: 1–4. ISSN 0028-7822. Retrieved 2007-01-30.
- ^ Dawkins, Richard (January–February 1997). "Is Science a Religion?". The Humanist. 57 (1). Washington, D.C.: American Humanist Association. ISSN 0018-7399. Archived from the original on 2002-08-22. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Johnson 1993, p. 63
- Tolson, Jay (September 5, 2005). "Religion in America: Intelligent Design on Trial". USNews.com. Archived from the original on 2006-06-21. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Moran, Laurence (1993). "Evolution is a Fact and a Theory". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Selman v. Cobb County School District, 449 F.3d 1320 (11th Cir. 2006).
- Dawkins, Richard (December 3, 2004). "Richard Dawkins on the Argument for Evolution" (Interview). Interviewed by Bill Moyers. Retrieved 2006-01-29.
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- ^ "Theory". Merriam-Webster (Definition). Chicago, IL: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Numbers 2006, p. 274: "To solve the age-old problem of distinguishing science from metaphysics or pseudoscience, Popper invoked the criterion of falsifiability as a substitute for the less rigorous test of verifiability."
- ^ Hansson, Sven Ove (2012) [First published September 3, 2008]. "Science and Pseudo-Science". In Zalta, Edward N (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2012 ed.). Stanford, CA: Stanford University. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
Popper described the demarcation problem as the 'key to most of the fundamental problems in the philosophy of science.' He refuted verifiability as a criterion for a scientific theory or hypothesis to be scientific, rather than pseudoscientific or metaphysical. Instead he proposed as a criterion that the theory be falsifiable, or more precisely that 'statements or systems of statements, in order to be ranked as scientific, must be capable of conflicting with possible, or conceivable observations'. Popper presented this proposal as a way to draw the line between statements belonging to the empirical sciences and 'all other statements – whether they are of a religious or of a metaphysical character, or simply pseudoscientific'. It was both an alternative to the logical positivists' verification criteria and a criterion for distinguishing between science and pseudoscience.
- ^ Number 1992, p. 247
- Wilkins, John S. (1997). "Evolution and Philosophy: Is Evolution Science, and What Does 'Science' Mean?". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Popper 1976, pp. 168, 172, quoted in Kofahl, Robert E. (May 22, 1981). "Popper on Darwinism". Science (Letter). 212 (4497). Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science: 873. doi:10.1126/science.11643641. ISSN 0036-8075.
{{cite journal}}
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(help) - ^ Unknown sociologist quoted in Numbers 1992, p. 247
- ^ Kofahl, Robert E. (June 1989). "The Hierarchy of Conceptual Levels For Scientific Thought And Research". Creation Research Society Quarterly (Abstract). 26 (1). Chino Valley, AZ: Creation Research Society. Retrieved 2007-01-29, as quoted by Numbers 1992, p. 247
- ^ Lewin, Roger (January 8, 1982). "Where Is the Science in Creation Science?". Science. 215 (4529). Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science: 142–144, 146. Bibcode:1982Sci...215..142L. doi:10.1126/science.215.4529.142.
{{cite journal}}
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(help) "Stephen Jay Gould states that creationists claim creation is a scientific theory," wrote Gish in a letter to Discover magazine (July 1981). "This is a false accusation. Creationists have repeatedly stated that neither creation nor evolution is a scientific theory (and each is equally religious)." - ^ Numbers 2006, p. 274
- ^ Kofahl 1981
- ^ Isaak, Mark, ed. (November 2, 2005). "Index to Creationist Claims: Claim CA211.1: Popper on natural selection's testability". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
- ^
Popper, Karl (December 1978). "Natural selection and the emergence of mind". Dialectica. 32 (3–4). Oxford: Blackwell Publishers: 339–355. doi:10.1111/j.1746-8361.1978.tb01321.x. ISSN 1746-8361. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Massimo Pigliucci (September–October 2004). "Did Popper Refute Evolution?" (PDF). Skeptical Inquirer. Amherst, NY: Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. ISSN 0194-6730. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Ruse 1999, pp. 13–37, which discusses conflicting ideas about science among Karl Popper, Thomas Kuhn, and their disciples.
- ^ As quoted by Wallis 2005, p. 32. Also see Dawkins 1986 and Dawkins 1995
- ^ Wallis, Claudia (August 7, 2005). "The Evolution Wars". Time. Retrieved 2007-01-31
{{cite journal}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help), p. 6. Richard Dawkins quoting J. B. S. Haldane. - ^ Dorman, Clark (January 30, 1996). "McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education". TalkOrigins Archive (Transcription). Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2007-01-31.
- ^ a b Ham 1987
- ^ Dembski 1998
- ^ Morris, Henry M. (February 2001). "Evolution Is Religion—Not Science" (PDF). Impact (332). El Cajon, CA: Institute for Creation Research: i–iv. OCLC 8153605. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Morris 1974
- ^ Wiker, Benjamin D. (July–August 2003). "Part II: The Christian Critics — Does Science Point to God?". Crisis Magazine. Washington, D.C.: Morley Publishing Group. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite journal}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Scott 2005
- ^ Isaak, Mark, ed. (February 15, 2004). "Index to Creationist Claims: Claim CA611: Evolution sacrosanct?". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Kutschera, Ulrich; Niklas, Karl J. (June 2004). "The modern theory of biological evolution: an expanded synthesis". Naturwissenschaften. 91 (6). Springer Science+Business Media: 255–276. Bibcode:2004NW.....91..255K. doi:10.1007/s00114-004-0515-y. ISSN 0028-1042. PMID 15241603.
- ^ Ham, Ken (November 1983). "Creation Evangelism (Part II of Relevance of Creation)". Ex Nihilo. 6 (2). Creation Science Foundation: 17. ISSN 0819-1530. Retrieved 2014-08-27. "Why has the Lord raised up Creation Science ministries worldwide? Why is it necessary to have such organizations? One thing we have come to realise in Creation Science is that the Lord has not just called us to knock down evolution, but to help in restoring the foundation of the Gospel in our society. We believe that if the churches took up the tool of Creation Evangelism in society, not only would we see a stemming of the tide of humanistic philosophy, but we would also see the seeds of revival sown in a culture which is becoming increasingly more pagan each day.
[...]
It is also worth noting the comment in the book, 'By Their Blood-Christian Martyrs of the 20th Century' (Most Media) by James and Marti Helfi, on page 49 and 50: 'New philosophies and theologies from the West also helped to erode Chinese confidence in Christianity. A new wave of so-called missionaries from mainline Protestant denominations came teaching evolution and a non-supernatural view of the Bible. Methodist, Presbyterian, Congregationalist, and Northern Baptist schools were especially hard hit. Bertrand Russell came from England preaching atheism and socialism. Destructive books brought by such teachers further undermined orthodox Christianity. The Chinese Intelligentsia who had been schooled by Orthodox Evangelical Missionaries were thus softened for the advent of Marxism.' Evolution is destroying the Church and society, and Christians need to be awakened to that fact!" [emphasis in the original]
- ^ Curtis, Gary N. "Logical Fallacy: Appeal to Consequences". The Fallacy Files. Greencastle, IN: Gary Curtis. Retrieved 2014-08-27. "…I want to list seventeen summary statements which, if true, provide abundant reason why the reader should reject evolution and accept special creation as his basic world-view. …
13. Belief in special creation has a salutary influence on mankind, since it encourages responsible obedience to the Creator and considerate recognition of those who were created by Him. …
16. Belief in evolution and animal kinship leads normally to selfishness, aggressiveness, and fighting between groups, as well as animalistic attitudes and behaviour by individuals." — Henry M. Morris, The Remarkable Birth of Planet Earth (Creation-Life Publishers, 1972), pp. vi–viii
- ^ Johnson 1993, p. 69. Johnson cites three pages spent in Isaac Asimov's New Guide to Science that take creationists to task, while only spending one half page on evidence of evolution.
- ^ Timmer, John (May 7, 2008). "Evolution: what's the real controversy?". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Wise, Kurt. "The Discontinuity of Life". Answers in Genesis. Hebron, KY: Answers in Genesis. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Luskin, Casy (May 12, 2009), "A Primer on the Tree of Life", Evolution News & Views, Seattle, WA: Discovery Institute, retrieved 2014-08-06
- ^ Morris, Henry M. (May 2002). "Evolution Versus the People" (PDF). Back to Genesis (161). El Cajon, CA: Institute for Creation Research: a–c. OCLC 26390403. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Stringer & Andrews 2005
- ^ Relethford 2004
- ^ "Toumaï the Human Ancestor". All Things Considered. NPR. July 10, 2002. Archived from the original on 2002-08-05. Retrieved 2009-02-21.
- ^ Britten, Roy J. (October 15, 2002). "Divergence between samples of chimpanzee and human DNA sequences is 5%, counting indels". PNAS. 99 (21). Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences: 13633–13635. Bibcode:2002PNAS...9913633B. doi:10.1073/pnas.172510699. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 129726. PMID 12368483.
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(help) - ^ Varki, Ajit; Altheide, Tasha K. (December 2005). "Comparing the human and chimpanzee genomes: Searching for needles in a haystack". Genome Research. 15 (12). Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press: 1746–1758. doi:10.1101/gr.3737405. ISSN 1549-5469. PMID 16339373. Retrieved 2011-11-14.
- ^ Hecht, Jeff (May 19, 2003). "Chimps are human, gene study implies". New Scientist. Reed Business Information. ISSN 0262-4079. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
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- Wildman, Derek E.; Uddin, Monica; Guozhen Liu; et al. (June 10, 2003). "Implications of natural selection in shaping 99.4% nonsynonymous DNA identity between humans and chimpanzees: Enlarging genus Homo". PNAS. 100 (12). Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences: 7181–7188. Bibcode:2003PNAS..100.7181W. doi:10.1073/pnas.1232172100. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 165850. PMID 12766228.
- ^ Foley, Jim (April 30, 2003). "Was Java Man a gibbon?". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Isaak 2007: See disputes over the classification of Neanderthals.
- ^ Foley, Jim (October 28, 2005). "Comparison of all skulls". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Kutschera, Ulrich; Niklas, KarlJ. (17 March 2004). "The modern theory of biological evolution: an expanded synthesis". Naturwissenschaften. 91 (6). Bibcode:2004NW.....91..255K. doi:10.1007/s00114-004-0515-y.
- ^ Morris, Henry M. (1977). The Genesis record : a scientific and devotional commentary on the book of Beginnings (27th ed.). Grand Rapids: Baker Book House. p. 63. ISBN 0801060044.
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- ^ Morris 1985, pp. 78–90
- ^ Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York & International Bible Students Association 1985, pp. 57–59
- ^ Gould, Stephen Jay (May 1994). "Hooking Leviathan by Its Past". Natural History. 103 (4). Research Triangle Park, NC: Natural History Magazine, Inc.: 8–15. ISSN 0028-0712. Retrieved 2014-08-27. Gould quotes from Hayward 1985.
- ^ Fordyce, R. Ewan; Barnes, Lawrence G. (May 1994). "The Evolutionary History of Whales and Dolphins". Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences. 22. Palo Alto, CA: Annual Reviews: 419–455. Bibcode:1994AREPS..22..419F. doi:10.1146/annurev.ea.22.050194.002223. ISSN 1545-4495.
- ^ Hoagland, Dodson & Hauck 2001, p. 298
- ^ Sarfati, Jonathan (December 2003). "Biblical chronogenealogies". TJ. 17 (3). Acacia Ridge, Queensland: Creation Science Foundation: 14–18. ISSN 1446-2648. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Hasel, Gerhard F. (1980). "The Meaning of the Chronogenealogies of Genesis 5 and 11". Origins. 7 (2). Loma Linda, CA: Geoscience Research Institute: 53–70. ISSN 0093-7495. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
- ^ del Peloso, E. F.; da Silva, L.; de Mello, G. F. Porto (April 2005). "The age of the Galactic thin disk from Th/Eu nucleocosmochronology". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 434 (1). Les Ulis: EDP Sciences; European Southern Observatory: 275–300. arXiv:astro-ph/0411698. Bibcode:2005A&A...434..275D. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20047060. ISSN 0004-6361.
- ^ Humphreys, D. Russell (October 2002). "Nuclear Decay: Evidence For A Young World" (PDF). Impact (352). El Cajon, CA: Institute for Creation Research: i–iv. OCLC 8153605. Retrieved 2014-05-08.
- ^ Henke, Kevin R. (June 20, 2010). "Dr. Humphreys' Young-Earth Helium Diffusion 'Dates': Numerous Fallacies Based on Bad Assumptions and Questionable Data". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27. Original version: March 17, 2005; Revisions: November 24, 2005; July 25, 2006 and June 20, 2010.
- ^ Meert, Joseph G. (February 6, 2003). "R.A.T.E: More Faulty Creation Science from The Institute for Creation Research". Gondwana Research. Gainesville, FL: Joseph Meert. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Dating methods discussed were potassium–argon dating, argon–argon dating, rubidium-strontium dating, samarium-neodymium dating, lutetium–hafnium, rhenium-osmium dating, and uranium-lead dating.
- ^ Wiens, Roger C. (2002) [First edition 1994]. "Radiometric Dating: A Christian Perspective". American Scientific Affiliation. Ipswich, MA: American Scientific Affiliation. pp. 20–21. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Chang, Kenneth (February 21, 2006). "Few Biologists but Many Evangelicals Sign Anti-Evolution Petition". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
- ^ a b Pieret, John, ed. (October 31, 2006). "The Quote Mine Project: Or, Lies, Damned Lies and Quote Mines". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
- ^ Isaak, Mark, ed. (September 27, 2003). "Index to Creationist Claims: Claim CA113: Quote mining". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
- Dunford, Mike (July 2, 2007). "A new (mis)take on an old paper". The Questionable Authority (Blog). ScienceBlogs LLC. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Myers, PZ (September 11, 2004). "I'm shocked, shocked to find that quote mining is going on in there!". Pharyngula.org (Blog). Morris, MN: PZ Myers. Archived from the original on 2004-09-16. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Stear, John (May 16, 2005). "The incomprehensible creationist - the Darwin 'eye' quote revisited". No Answers in Genesis!. Melbourne: Australian Skeptics Science and Education Foundation. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ "The Panda's Thumb: Quote Mines Archives". The Panda's Thumb (Blog). Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Phillips 2006
- ^ a b Annas, George J. (May 25, 2006). "Intelligent Judging — Evolution in the Classroom and the Courtroom". The New England Journal of Medicine. 354 (21). Waltham, MA: Massachusetts Medical Society: 2277–2281. doi:10.1056/NEJMlim055660. ISSN 0028-4793. PMID 16723620. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
That this controversy is one largely manufactured by the proponents of creationism and intelligent design may not matter, and as long as the controversy is taught in classes on current affairs, politics, or religion, and not in science classes, neither scientists nor citizens should be concerned.
- ^ See:
- List of scientific societies explicitly rejecting intelligent design
- Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, 04 cv 2688 (M.D. Pa. December 20, 2005). Whether ID Is Science, p. 83.
- The Discovery Institute's A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism petition begun in 2001 has been signed by "over 700 scientists" as of August 20, 2006. The four-day A Scientific Support for Darwinism petition gained 7,733 signatories from scientists opposing ID.
- AAAS 2002. The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the largest association of scientists in the U.S., has 120,000 members, and firmly rejects ID.
- More than 70,000 Australian scientists "...urge all Australian governments and educators not to permit the teaching or promulgation of ID as science."
- National Center for Science Education: List of statements from scientific professional organizations on the status intelligent design and other forms of creationism in the sciences.
- ^ Via, Sara (Lecturer); Holman, Emmett (Respondent) (April 20, 2006). The Origin of Species: What Do We Really Know? (Speech). AAAS Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion. Washington, D.C. Archived from the original on 2006-04-21. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Woods 2005, pp. 67–114, Chapter five: "The Church and Science"
- ^ * Morris, Henry M. (January 1982). "Bible-Believing Scientists of the Past". Acts & Facts. 11 (1). San Diego, CA: Institute for Creation Research. ISSN 1094-8562. Retrieved 2007-01-20.
- ^ Isaak, Mark, ed. (November 25, 2005). "Index to Creationist Claims: Claim CA114: Creationist scientists". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Ayala, Francisco J. (January–February 1977). "'Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution'". Journal of Heredity. 68 (1). Oxford University Press; American Genetic Association: 3, 9. ISSN 0022-1503. Ayala stated that "Dobzhansky was a religious man."
- ^ Isaak, Mark, ed. (February 22, 2004). "Index to Creationist Claims: Claim CA114.22: Pasteur and creationism". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Robinson, Bruce A. (February 11, 2014) [Originally published November 28, 1999]. "Conflicts & occasional agreements in 'truth' between science and religion". ReligiousTolerance.org. Kingston, Ontario: Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Dawkins, Richard (May 15, 2006). "Why I Won't Debate Creationists". RichardDawkins.net. Washington, D.C.: Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science. Archived from the original on 2007-07-13. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ a b c Shermer, Michael (May 10, 2004). "Then a Miracle Occurs: An Obstreperous Evening with the Insouciant Kent Hovind, Young Earth Creationist and Defender of the Faith". eSkeptic. The Skeptics Society. ISSN 1556-5696. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
- ^ Pigliucci 2002, p. 102
- ^ Luvan, Dylan (September 24, 2012). "Bill Nye warns: Creation views threaten US science". Associated Press. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ "Bill Nye: Creationism Is Not Appropriate For Children" on YouTube
- ^ Boyle, Alan (February 5, 2014). "Bill Nye Wins Over the Science Crowd at Evolution Debate". NBC News. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
- ^ Kopplin, Zack (February 4, 2014). "Why Bill Nye the Science Guy is trying to reason with America's creationists". The Guardian. London: Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
- ^ "Bill Nye debates Ken Ham FULL - Comments Enabled" on YouTube
- ^ Shermer 2002, p. 153
- ^ "Statements from Scientific and Scholarly Organizations". National Center for Science Education. Berkeley, CA: National Center for Science Education. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Humes, Edward (February 18, 2007). "Unintelligent designs on Darwin". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Pittsburgh, PA: Tribune-Review Publishing Company. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Le Page, Michael (April 19, 2008). "Evolution myths: It doesn't matter if people don't grasp evolution". New Scientist. 198 (2652). Reed Business Information: 31. doi:10.1016/S0262-4079(08)60984-7. ISSN 0262-4079. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Hecht, Jeff (August 19, 2006). "Why doesn't America believe in evolution?". New Scientist. 191 (2565). Reed Business Information: 11. doi:10.1016/S0262-4079(06)60136-X. ISSN 0262-4079. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ a b Pitock, Todd (June 21, 2007). "Science and Islam in Conflict". Discover. 28 (6). Waukesha, WI: Kalmbach Publishing: 36–45. ISSN 0274-7529. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ a b c Katz, Gregory (February 16, 2008). "Clash Over Creationism Is Evolving In Europe's Schools". The Tampa Tribune. Tampa, FL: Tampa Media Group, Inc. Associated Press. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
- ^ a b c Edis, Taner (November–December 1999). "Cloning Creationism in Turkey". Reports of the National Center for Science Education. 19 (6). Berkeley, CA: National Center for Science Education: 30–35. ISSN 2158-818X. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
- ^ "Serbia reverses Darwin suspension". BBC News. London: BBC. September 9, 2004. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ Highfield, Roger (October 2, 2007). "Creationists rewrite natural history". The Daily Telegraph. London: Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
- ^ Blancke, Stefaan (December 2010). "Creationism in the Netherlands". Zygon. 45 (4). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell: 791–816. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9744.2010.01134.x. ISSN 0591-2385. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ "Recognition for Our Noodly Friend". New Scientist (Feedback). 196 (2629). Reed Business Information: 112. November 10, 2007. doi:10.1016/S0262-4079(07)62868-1. ISSN 0262-4079. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- ^ "'Evolution abroad'". National Center for Science Education. Berkeley, CA: National Center for Science Education. March 4, 2011. Retrieved 2014-05-02.
- ^ Numbers 1998
- ^ Hennessy, Carly (May 30, 2010). "Creationism to be taught in Queensland classrooms". Herald Sun. Melbourne: The Herald and Weekly Times. Retrieved 2010-07-22.
- ^ Plimer 1994
- ^ Campbell, Richard (producer); Smith, Robyn (researcher); Plimer, Ian (July 17, 2007). "'Telling Lies for God'? One Man's Crusade". Quantum. Transcript. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
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Citations
- Barbour, Ian G. (1997) [Originally published 1990 as Religion in an Age of Science: The Gifford Lectures, 1989–1991, Volume 1]. Religion and Science: Historical and Contemporary Issues (Revised and expanded ed.). San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco. ISBN 0-06-060938-9. LCCN 97006294. OCLC 36417827.
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(help) - Burns, Edward M.; Ralph, Philip Lee; Lerner, Robert E.; Standish, Meacham (1982). World Civilizations: Their History and Their Culture (Sixth ed.). New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-95077-8. LCCN 81018858. OCLC 7998534.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Dawkins, Richard (1986). The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe without Design. Illustrations by Liz Pyle (1st American ed.). New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-465-01606-5. LCCN 85004960. OCLC 802616493.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Dawkins, Richard (1995). River Out of Eden: A Darwinian View of Life. Illustrations by Lalla Ward. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-06990-8. LCCN 94037146. OCLC 31376584.
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(help) - Dembski, William A. (1998). The Design Inference: Eliminating Chance through Small Probabilities. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-62387-1. LCCN 98003020. OCLC 38551103.
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(help) - Desmond, Adrian; Moore, James (1991). Darwin. London; New York: Michael Joseph; Viking Penguin. ISBN 0-7181-3430-3. LCCN 92196964. OCLC 26502431.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Dewey, John (1994). "The Influence of Darwinism on Philosophy". In Gardner, Martin (ed.). Great Essays in Science. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books. ISBN 0-87975-853-8. LCCN 93035453. OCLC 28846489.
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(help) - Dixon, Thomas (2008). Science and Religion: A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-929551-7. LCCN 2008023565. OCLC 269622437.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Gray, Asa (1876). Darwiniana: Essays and Reviews Pertaining to Darwinism. New York: D. Appleton & Company. LCCN 04005631. OCLC 774014. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Ham, Ken (1987). "Evolution is Religion". the Lie: Evolution. Green Forest, AR: Master Books. ISBN 0-89051-158-6. LCCN 00108776. OCLC 228478705.
{{cite book}}
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requires|url=
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|ref=harv
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suggested) (help) - Hayward, Alan (1985). Creation and Evolution: The Facts and the Fallacies. London: Triangle. ISBN 028104158X. LCCN 85170017. OCLC 733091884.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Hoagland, Mahlon B.; Dodson, Bert; Hauck, Judith (2001). Exploring the Way Life Works: The Science of Biology. Sudbury, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 0-7637-1688-X. LCCN 00067790. OCLC 45487537.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Hodge, Charles (1874). "What is Darwinism?". New York: Scribner, Armstrong, and Company. LCCN 06012878. OCLC 1004320. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - Huls, Jessica; Baker, Catherine (2006). Miller, James B. (ed.). A Study Guide for The Evolution Dialogues: Science, Christianity, and the Quest for Understanding (PDF) (Study guide). Feedback by Stephen Kolderup. Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science: Program of Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion. OCLC 526547019. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Huxley, Thomas Henry (1902) [Originally published 1894]. "An Episcopal Trilogy [1887]". Science and Christian Tradition: Essays. Vol. V. New York: D. Appleton & Company. pp. 126–159. ISBN 978-1-4179-7372-9. LCCN 41030619. OCLC 634917253.
{{cite book}}
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|ref=harv
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suggested) (help) - Isaak, Mark (2007). The Counter-Creationism Handbook (Rev. ed.). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24926-4. LCCN 2006047492. OCLC 69241583.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Johnson, Phillip E. (1993). Darwin on Trial (2nd ed.). Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press. ISBN 0-8308-1324-1. LCCN 93029217. OCLC 28889094.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Johnson, Phillip E. (1998) [Originally published 1995]. Reason in the Balance: The Case Against Naturalism in Science, Law & Education. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press. ISBN 0-8308-1929-0. LCCN 95012620. OCLC 705966918.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Larson, Edward J. (2003). Trial and Error: The American Controversy Over Creation and Evolution (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515470-3. LCCN 2003269591. OCLC 52478644.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Larson, Edward J. (2004). Evolution: The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory. New York: Modern Library. ISBN 0-679-64288-9. LCCN 2003064888. OCLC 53483597.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Morris, Henry M., ed. (1974). Scientific Creationism. Prepared by the technical staff and consultants of the Institute for Creation Research. San Diego, CA: Creation-Life Publishers. ISBN 0-89-051004-0. LCCN 74014160. OCLC 1556752.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Morris, Henry M., ed. (1985). Scientific Creationism. Prepared by the technical staff and consultants of the Institute for Creation Research (2nd ed.). El Cajon, CA: Master Books. ISBN 0-89-051003-2. LCCN 92248659. OCLC 37546530.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - National Academy of Sciences (1999). Science and Creationism: A View from the National Academy of Sciences (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. ISBN 0-309-06406-6. LCCN 99006259. OCLC 43803228. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- National Academy of Sciences; Institute of Medicine (2008). Science, Evolution, and Creationism. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. ISBN 978-0-309-10586-6. LCCN 2007015904. OCLC 123539346. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
- Nelkin, Dorothy (2000) [Originally published 1982; New York: W. W. Norton & Company]. The Creation Controversy: Science or Scripture in the Schools. Lincoln, NE: toExcel Press. ISBN 0-595-00194-7. OCLC 45207227.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Numbers, Ronald L. (1992). The Creationists: The Evolution of Scientific Creationism (1st ed.). New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-679-40104-0. LCCN 91029562. OCLC 24318343.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Numbers, Ronald L. (1998). Darwinism Comes to America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-19312-1. LCCN 98016212. OCLC 38747194.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Numbers, Ronald L. (2006). The Creationists: From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design (Expanded ed., 1st Harvard University Press pbk. ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-02339-0. LCCN 2006043675. OCLC 69734583.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Phillips, Kevin (2006). American Theocracy: The Peril and Politics of Radical Religion, Oil, and Borrowed Money in the 21st Century. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-03486-X. LCCN 2005056361. OCLC 64565613.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Pigliucci, Massimo (2002). Denying Evolution: Creationism, Scientism, and the Nature of Science. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates. ISBN 0-87893-659-9. LCCN 2002005190. OCLC 49530100.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Plimer, Ian (1994). Telling Lies for God: Reason vs Creationism. Milsons Point, NSW: Random House Australia. ISBN 0-09-182852-X. LCCN 94237744. OCLC 32608689.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Popper, Karl (1976) ["First published as 'Autobiography of Karl Popper' in The Philosophy of Karl Popper ... by the Open Court Publishing Co., Illinois, 1974."]. Unended Quest: An Intellectual Autobiography (Rev. ed.). London: Fontana. ISBN 0-00634-116-0. LCCN 78300832. OCLC 2927208.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Relethford, John H. (2004) [Originally published 2003]. Reflections of Our Past: How Human History is Revealed in Our Genes. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-3958-8. LCCN 2006272323. OCLC 52350687.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Ruse, Michael (1999). Mystery of Mysteries: Is Evolution a Social Construction?. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-46706-X. LCCN 98041969. OCLC 39887080.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Salhany, Roger E. (1986). The Origin of Rights. Toronto: Carswell. ISBN 0-459-38750-2. LCCN 86177651. OCLC 13735694.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Scott, Eugenie (2005) [Originally published 2004; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press]. Evolution Vs. Creationism: An Introduction. Foreword by Niles Eldredge (1st pbk. ed.). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-24650-0. LCCN 2005048649. OCLC 60420899.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Shermer, Michael (2002). Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition, and Other Confusions of Our Time. Foreword by Stephen Jay Gould (Rev. and expanded ed.). New York: A. W. H. Freeman and Company/Owl Books. ISBN 0-8050-7089-3. LCCN 2002068784. OCLC 49874665.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Stringer, Chris; Andrews, Peter (2005). The Complete World of Human Evolution. London; New York: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05132-1. LCCN 2004110563. OCLC 57484734.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York; International Bible Students Association (1985). Life—How did it get here?: By evolution or by creation? (1st ed.). Brooklyn, NY: Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania. LCCN 85195595. OCLC 12673992.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Witham, Larry A. (2002). "From Broadway to Biophilia". Where Darwin Meets the Bible: Creationists and Evolutionists in America. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515045-7. LCCN 2002022028. OCLC 49031009.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Woods, Thomas E., Jr. (2005). How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing. ISBN 0-89526-038-7. LCCN 2005007380. OCLC 58720707.
{{cite book}}
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Zacharias, Ravi K. (2000). Jesus Among Other Gods: The Absolute Claims of the Christian Message. Nashville, TN: Word Publishing. ISBN 0-8499-1437-X. LCCN 00039920. OCLC 44026449.
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Further reading
- Books
- Burian, Richard M. (1994). "Dobzhansky on Evolutionary Dynamics: Some Questions about His Russian Background". In Adams, Mark B. (ed.). The Evolution of Theodosius Dobzhansky: Essays on His Life and Thought in Russia and America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-03479-6. LCCN 93042144. OCLC 29478000.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Butler, Samuel (1911) [Originally published 1879]. Evolution, Old and New; Or, the theories of Buffon, Dr. Erasmus Darwin, and Lamarck, as compared with that of Charles Darwin (New (the Third) ed.). London: A. C. Fifield. OCLC 54166072. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Darwin, Charles (1996). Beer, Gillian (ed.). On the Origin of Species. The World's Classics. Introduction by Gillian Beer. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-281783-3. LCCN 95008377. OCLC 7136063.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Dawkins, Richard (2010). The greatest show on earth : the evidence for evolution (1st Free Press trade pbk. ed.). New York: Free Press. ISBN 978-1416594796.
- Dobzhansky, Theodosius (1982) [Originally published 1937]. Genetics and the Origin of Species. Columbia Classics in Evolution Series; Columbia Biological Series, no. 11. Introduction by Stephen Jay Gould. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-05475-0. LCCN 82004278. OCLC 8346156.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Ecker, Ronald L. (1996). The Evolutionary Tales: Rhyme and Reason on Creation/Evolution with Apologies to Chaucer and Darwin (2nd ed.). Palatka, FL: Hodge & Braddock. ISBN 0-9636512-2-6. LCCN 95082075. OCLC 36481947.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Haught, John F. (2010). Making Sense of Evolution: Darwin, God, and the Drama of Life (1st ed.). Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-23285-6. LCCN 2009033748. OCLC 430056870.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Henig, Robin Marantz (2000). The Monk in the Garden: The Lost and Found Genius of Gregor Mendel, The Father of Genetics. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-395-97765-7. LCCN 00024341. OCLC 43648512.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Mayr, Ernst (1985). The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press. ISBN 0-67-436445-7. LCCN 81013204. OCLC 7875904.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Miller, James B., ed. (2001). An Evolving Dialogue: Theological and Scientific Perspectives on Evolution. Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press International. ISBN 1-56338-349-7. LCCN 00054513. OCLC 45668855.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Morris, Henry M. (1963). The Twilight of Evolution. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House. ISBN 0-8010-5862-7. LCCN 63021471. OCLC 500684639.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Sagan, Carl (1995). The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark (1st ed.). New York: Random House. ISBN 0-39-453512-X. LCCN 95034076. OCLC 367445582.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Smith, Maynard (1969). "The status of neo-Darwinism". In Waddington, C. H (ed.). Towards a Theoretical Biology. Vol. 2. Sketches. Chicago, IL: Aldine Publishing Company. LCCN 68019881. OCLC 769099892.
{{cite book}}
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(help) An International Union of Biological Sciences Symposium, August 1967. - Strobel, Lee, ed. (2004). The Case for a Creator: A Journalist Investigates Scientific Evidence that Points Toward God (1st ed.). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan. ISBN 0-310-24144-8. LCCN 2003023566. OCLC 53398125.
{{cite book}}
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(help)
- Journals
- Hull, David L. (October 1999). "The Use and Abuse of Sir Karl Popper". Biology and Philosophy. 14 (4). Kluwer Academic Publishers: 481–504. doi:10.1023/A:1006554919188. ISSN 0169-3867. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Morris, Steven L. (September–December 2005). "Creationism and the Laws of Thermodynamics". Reports of the National Center for Science Education. 25 (5–6). Berkeley, CA: National Center for Science Education: 31–32. ISSN 2158-818X. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Pennock, Robert T. (September 2003). "Creationism and intelligent design". Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics. 4. Palo Alto, CA: Annual Reviews: 143–163. doi:10.1146/annurev.genom.4.070802.110400. ISSN 1545-293X. PMID 14527300.
- Popper, Karl (August 21, 1980). "Evolution". New Scientist (Letter to the editor). 87 (1215). Reed Business Information: 611. ISSN 0262-4079. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
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(help) - Scott, Eugenie (October 1997). "Antievolution and creationism in the United States". Annual Review of Anthropology. 26. Palo Alto, CA: Annual Reviews: 263–289. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.26.1.263. ISSN 0084-6570.
- Web
- Isaak, Mark, ed. (2006). "An Index to Creationist Claims". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
- Tippett, Krista (host); Moore, James (February 5, 2009). "Evolution and Wonder: Understanding Charles Darwin". Speaking of Faith with Krista Tippett (Transcript). NPR. Retrieved 2014-07-25.
External links
- "Ten Major Court Cases about Evolution and Creationism" – by Molleen Matsumura and Louise Mead, National Center for Science Education