English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-06-10 09:06:48 · 25 answers · asked by Menifeedave 2 in Politics & Government Politics

25 answers

by all means. teach the children to think. don't just teach them to except whatever is thrown their way.

2006-06-10 09:11:17 · answer #1 · answered by ? 5 · 0 1

First to every idiot that says evolution is just a theory, learn what a theory means in science. It has a totally different meaning then the common term. This is simple stuff you should no if you are going to argue about evolution. Second, no creationism should not be taught in the class because there are no facts or evidence behind it. Only stupid stories written my man thousands of years ago that some how are now considered the word of God. THERE IS NO EVIDENCE TO IT. However there is much evidence for evolution, and I noticed no one that believes in Creation can dismiss it. They only ignore it or say the devil did it. To teach creationism in school will just make America's failing school system ever worse. You cannot teach faith as a fact since by definition faith as no evidence to it, just a gut feeling. However evolution has made it to a theory which is the highest anything can go in science. A law is a theory, believe it or not, that is able to predict future events from the observation of past ones. I just put that part of a law in because I cannot stand idiots that think a theory is just some guess while a law is absolute. All laws are theories in science. So stop saying evolution is just a theory, try and learn something before speaking.

2006-06-12 16:34:12 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Real Creationism is not what the public thinks it is. People mistakenly believe you have the theory of evolution on one hand, and some religious zealots on the other hand who propose that god just waved his ethereal finger and zapped everything into place.

The more scientists learn, the more they realize that there must be some guiding hand in everything. The scientists aren't denying processes such as evolution took place, they are saying that RANDOM SELECTION does not explain the changes.

Scientists say the degree of order they see cannot be explained; a hidden hand seems to be guiding the process. There is a discernible order when randomness should prevail. Hence, this is a thinly-veiled indication of a divine power. I have heard scientists go so far as to say, "It's almost like god is softly winking at us, saying 'here I am' ".

I am most definitely not religious. I grew up Catholic, but never go to church anymore. Still, I believe there is a higher power. Why is it more logical to believe that the entire universe just popped out of nothingness?

So remember, there should be no conflict between theories like evolution and creationism, as long as you have a mind open enough to allow for the existence of god.

2006-06-10 09:37:52 · answer #3 · answered by pachl@sbcglobal.net 7 · 0 0

All of this "both sides of the story" crap is insane. Creationism and Intelligent Design are hocus pocus, childish fantasy. They have no basis in science because they are not testable or falsifiable as any real theory must be in order to pass scientific muster.

To say we should teach our children Intelligent Design along with The Theories of Evolution in order to give them a choice is asinine. What an incredible disservice we'd be doing to children in America who are already struggling to stay up on the international learning curve.

And those claiming the scientific community actually buys into Intelligent Design are either charlatans or completely uneducated. The qualified scientific community does not in any way shape or form accept Intelligent Design or Creationism as valid scientific theories. Many scientists say they do not deny the existence of a God. That's all kids. It's not a validation of Creationism nor is it a scientific statement. The whole principle behind Intelligent Design is based the false notion that man and all other life forms on Earth are "irreducibly complex". Science does not accept this as the basis for real theory. The principle is not testable. Homework kids! You need to do it.

What's next? Should we give kids a choice between astronomy and astrology?

2006-06-13 03:37:01 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No.. Creationism is exclusively a theologically driven theory. It is in many religous texts, and it is by definition a religous theory.

Unless the Seperation of Church & State Law is overturned by the US Congress, it is illegal to teach it in public (emphasis on public) schools.

Einstein's Theory of Relativity can be taught as well as other theory's, like Evolutonism, but they can be taught since their basis is in science, not religion.

2006-06-10 09:15:05 · answer #5 · answered by RDHamm 4 · 0 0

It was taught as an option in the schools I attended (public schools). This is because evolution is still just a theory and they want to give all options.

2006-06-10 09:10:30 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No.

If they do, they will alienate those of different beliefs and of the scientific-based reasoning. Hardly is the place for a "public" school.

If they start with Creationism, imagine how far it would go. Next thing that would be taught is Christianity itself...

2006-06-10 09:12:05 · answer #7 · answered by azrach187 3 · 0 0

No--they are already too low. I artwork in a technologies organisation and we've super project looking those with PhDs in math and physics who can artwork out the final factors that takes an concept from concept to application. suited now we are falling at the back of something of the worldwide at a speedier fee than we ever have earlier. interior the previous, we exceeded the worldwide while it got here to medical advances. those days, we prepare the worldwide and the folk we prepare take that training decrease back to their residing house international locations. And on the fee that we are falling at the back of, as greater professors retire, we are able to by no ability be waiting to even do this anymore interior the close to destiny. we are dropping our toddlers by no longer making an investment in our consumer-friendly and extreme colleges.

2016-12-08 08:11:33 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

parents should never leave this important stuff up to public institutions...personally, i tried to teach my sons mopre than the public schools could teach them...
public schools are just like sheep herds...the teachers cant keep up with all the kids and the kids think being lazy and stupid is cool..

teach your kids the things you believe to be most important at home and never let the public school system twist their values...

2006-06-10 09:11:28 · answer #9 · answered by badjanssen 5 · 0 0

I don't think it should. If a parent wants their child to learn about it, they can teach them or send them to a private school that teaches it. It needs to stay out of public schools.

2006-06-10 09:30:17 · answer #10 · answered by ~ Sara ~ 4 · 0 0

We should teach children that people who belive in Creationism are exhibiting "schizotypy" and should be treated for mental illness so they can come back to a more healthy status in our society and be productive, rational, human beings.

2006-06-10 09:17:05 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers