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The Texas-Size Debate Over Teaching Evolution

 

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Perhaps dimly aware that they don't want a total victory, either, McLeroy and his allies now say that they ask for evolution to be taught only with all its "strengths and weaknesses." But in this, they are surely being somewhat disingenuous. When their faction was strong enough to demand an outright ban on the teaching of what they call "Darwinism," they had such a ban written into law in several states. Since the defeat and discredit of that policy, they have passed through several stages of what I am going to have to call evolution. First, they tried to get "secular humanism" classified as a "religion," so that it would meet the First Amendment's disqualification for being taught with taxpayers' money. (That bright idea was Pat Robertson's.) Then they came up with the formulation of "creation science," picking up on anomalies and gaps in evolution and on differences between scientific Darwinists like Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould. Next came the ingratiating plea for "equal time"—what could be more American than that?and now we have the rebranded new coinage of "intelligent design" and the fresh complaint that its brave advocates are, so goes the title of a recent self-pitying documentary, simply "expelled" from the discourse.

It's not just that the overwhelming majority of scientists are now convinced that evolution is inscribed in the fossil record and in the lineaments of molecular biology. It is more that evolutionists will say in advance which evidence, if found, would refute them and force them to reconsider. ("Rabbit fossils in the pre-Cambrian layer" was, I seem to remember, the response of Prof. J.B.S. Haldane.) Try asking an "intelligent design" advocate to stipulate upfront what would constitute refutation of his world view and you will easily see the difference between the scientific method and the pseudoscientific one.

But that is just my opinion. And I certainly do not want it said that my side denies a hearing to the opposing one. In the spirit of compromise, then, I propose the following. First, let the school debating societies restage the wonderful set-piece real-life dramas of Oxford and Dayton, Tenn. Let time also be set aside, in our increasingly multiethnic and multicultural school system, for children to be taught the huge variety of creation stories, from the Hindu to the Muslim to the Australian Aboriginal. This is always interesting (and it can't be, can it, that the Texas board holdouts think that only Genesis ought to be so honored?). Second, we can surely demand that the principle of "strengths and weaknesses" will be applied evenly. If any church in Texas receives a tax exemption, or if any religious institution is the beneficiary of any subvention from the Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, we must be assured that it will devote a portion of its time to laying bare the "strengths and weaknesses" of the religious world view, and also to teaching the works of Voltaire, David Hume, Benedict de Spinoza, Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson. This is America. Let a hundred flowers bloom, and a thousand schools of thought contend. We may one day have cause to be grateful to the Texas Board of Education for lighting a candle that cannot be put out.

Hitchens, a NEWSWEEK contributor, is a columnist for Vanity Fair. His book “God Is Not Great” is newly available in paperback.

© 2009

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: skob @ 09/30/2009 12:17:08 PM

    haha for all the big words you used your arguments is still that of a child. "prove to me god doesnt exist" prove to me pixies dont live in my closet. then again you cant because if you claim there are no pixies you are also "plainly overextending your abilities" or is my high blood sugar causing me to miss one hell of a sarcastic comment

  • Posted By: Dencal26 @ 07/05/2009 10:51:18 AM

    I often wonder why Jews in Media and politics are never asked about their belief in Genesis or other parts of what we call the " Old Testament". Does anyone ask Schumer or Boxer or Feinstein? Does anyone ask Waxman or Specter or Bloomberg? Have you ever heard the question posed to Feinstein or Feingold or Al Franken?

  • Posted By: davidsdca @ 05/03/2009 2:01:36 PM

    Fine post indeed. But, you overlook a very basic point and therefore create a straw man argument. It is not possible to prove the absence of an object (be it god or other), only its presence. If you read or listen to Hitchens, you will find that he readily admits that he cannot prove the non-existence of god ... the attempt to do so would be a fool's errand. Instead, he argues that there is no good reason for believing that a god exists and, furthermore, that even if there were, there is no good reason to believe that the existing god is the one described in any holy text.

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