Ohio tackles the evolution controversy
- Phyllis Schlafly
The Cleveland Plain Dealer editorialized that public school
instructors
should limit their teaching to "the most widely accepted scientific
theory"
and teachers should not "stray from it."
The notion that such a closedmind, unscientific approach could be advocated
in a major newspaper in our current era, when the generally lauded
icons are
diversity, academic freedom, free speech, critical thinking, multiculturalism
and opposition to censorship, is truly remarkable.
The truth and accuracy of science should be determined
by
scientific evidence and open debate, not by silencing dissent.
How the subject of evolution is treated in the classroom has emerged again
as a source of controversy, this time in the Ohio State Board of Education.
Until now, Ohio public schools have not mandated any direct teaching
about the subject.
"Standards" is the new fad sweeping across schools today, and the Ohio Legislature
has ordered the state's Department of Education to writed standards that guide
how all subjects are taught in public school classrooms. The standards
for math and English were accepted rather easily, but the science standards
suddenly became very controversial.
The "No Child Left Behind" bill signed by President Bush on Jan. 8 includes
a science requirement that focuses on "the data and testable theories of science."
This new federal law specifies that "where topics are taught that may
generate controversy (such as biological evolution), the curriculum should
help students to understand the full range of scientific views that exist."
When the Ohio writing team presented its first draft, it failed to help
students understand "the full range of scientific views" and instead tried
to mandate Darwinian evolution as the only acceptable teaching. Ohio's
curriculum standards committee questioned why the draft included no ideological
diversity, and the media immediately rushed in to fan the flames of old prejudices
and activate the liberals who want to raise phony issues about separation
of church and state.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer editorialized that public school instructors
should limit their teaching to "the most widely accepted scientific theory"
and teachers should not "stray from it." The Plain Dealer, plainly,
is dealing the censorship card to stifle scientific debate and dissent.
The notion that such a closedmind, unscientific approach could be advocated
in a major newspaper in our current era, when the generally lauded icons are
diversity, academic freedom, free speech, critical thinking, multiculturalism
and opposition to censorship, is truly remarkable. The truth and accuracy
of science should be determined by scientific evidence and open debate, not
by silencing dissent.
But censorship about evolution is common. After Lehigh University
biochemistry professor Michael Behe argued that irreducible complexity in
nature disproves Darwinian evolution, some high schools have censored his
book in response to presure from the evolutionists.
If a scientific theory is true, there is no need to censor criticism. By
definition, if a theory is scientific, if should be demonstrated by evidence
and replicable experiments, and testable against alternate hypotheses.
Any committee presuming to write school science standards should honestly
face up to the fact that current science textbooks usually include demonstratable
errors. Some of these errors were exposed years or decades ago but remain
in the textbooks.
Many science textbooks show diagrams or illustrations to reinforce the claim
that all modern animals, as well as man, diverged from a common ancestor.
Most textbooks ignore the evidence from the Cambrian explosion, in which
major groups of animals suddenly appeared in the fossil record without any
evidence of common ancestry.
The picture of the peppered moths is a favorite in science textbooks to
try to demonstrate natural selection in the wild. We now know that
the picture is a fake (moths were glued on tree trunks for a photo-op).
The 19th century drawings of vertebrate embryos showing humans evolved from
a fish-like ancestor have also been shown to have been faked. This was
even admitted by The New York Times.
In the face of such dishonesty (now becoming widely known because of the
Internet), the Darwinian-only majority of academics has been steadily retreating.
Because Darwin's theory has not stood the test of time (it predates
the Civil War), respectable scientists have been developing alternate theories
of life's origins by presenting evidence of what is called intelligent design.
Are we going to teach our young peopele to develop inquiring minds and to
be open to new discoveries, or are we going to teach them that science is
static, that everything about the origins of life has already been determined
and there are no possible deviations from what the establishment has dictated?
Science standards and textbooks should not mandate the dogmas of the past
when they are beset with increasing evidences of error and fraud, and when
new discoveries can and do occur. Science should be about avaluating
new evidence as it emerges.
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