manubeckm7
Inactive Member
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There really isn't a problem with teaching evolution in schools. The real problem is that teachers really aren't teaching all aspects of it. They teach the minimal amount. They don't teach all of the parts of it that have been disproven or the problems with the theory itself. If they were to teach all of it, they would actually be teaching intelligent design or creationism by disproving the theory. If you were to show a biologist a high school biology textbook, they would tell you that even they don't believe most of it. The teachers have their own agendas, and that is to push their own viewpoints.
This message is a reply to: | | Message 1 by ViewOfWorld, posted 11-21-2002 10:30 PM | | ViewOfWorld has not replied |
Replies to this message: | | Message 15 by Quetzal, posted 11-25-2002 1:18 AM | | manubeckm7 has not replied |
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manubeckm7
Inactive Member
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I completely agree that this is corruption; it isn't right to force these views upon growing minds. If you were to present Charles Darwin with the discoveries we have made involving the increased complexity of his original theory, he would even realize his mistake. The man was having a spiritual crisis at the time. Some of his ideas were right, I will admit, but he was really grasping for some new concepts to help himself out. He's not the one who came out and said that we all evolved from monkeys. He's just a poster boy for evolutionists.
This message is a reply to: | | Message 1 by ViewOfWorld, posted 11-21-2002 10:30 PM | | ViewOfWorld has not replied |
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