FT.com / World / US – Bush wants alternatives to Darwinism taught in school

President George W. Bush stirred the debate on the teaching of evolution in schools when he said this week that he supported the teaching of alternative viewpoints – such as the theory of Intelligent Design – to help students “understand what the debate is about”.

“I think that part of education is to expose people to different schools of thought,” Mr Bush said in comments to five Texas newspapers on Monday. “You’re asking me whether or not people ought to be exposed to different ideas, the answer is yes.”

I think these guys need to go all the way with this and at least think about teaching flat earth theory. After all, it is an alternative viewpoint and supported by the Bible.

Start with this website linked here.

When I first became interested in the flat-earthers in the early 1970s, I was surprised to learn that flat-earthism in the English-speaking world is and always has been entirely based upon the Bible. I have since assembled and read an extensive collection of flat-earth literature. The Biblical arguments for flat-earthism that follow come mainly from my reading of flat-earth literature, augmented by my own reading of the Bible.

Except among Biblical inerrantists, it is generally agreed that the Bible describes an immovable earth. At the 1984 National Bible-Science Conference in Cleveland, geocentrist James N. Hanson told me there are hundreds of scriptures that suggest the earth is immovable. I suspect some must be a bit vague, but here are a few obvious texts:

1 Chronicles 16:30: “He has fixed the earth firm, immovable.”

Psalm 93:1: “Thou hast fixed the earth immovable and firm …”

Psalm 96:10: “He has fixed the earth firm, immovable …”

Psalm 104:5: “Thou didst fix the earth on its foundation so that it never can be shaken.”

Isaiah 45:18: “…who made the earth and fashioned it, and himself fixed it fast…”

I wonder how the Biblical absolutists deal with these “truths?”

related links:
Darwin pics



  1. Miguel Lopes says:

    A couple of points more:

    Someone once said that in an argument between a rational person saying 2+2=4 and some radical saying 2+2=2, a moderate will say 2+2=3…

    And…

    What’s next for the Bush administration? THEY’LL SAY WE NEVER ACTUALLY LANDED ON THE MOON!!! It was all an illusion done in some Area-51 movie studio, that had to be done to somehow help win the cold war. That’s the whole point behind his Moon-Mars ‘initiative’…. Maybe NOW we can go…

    Sheesh….

  2. meetsy says:

    Jeff s….
    the creation part of the bible smacks of Zorasterism. It’s a pagan style story with mud, and sky…and all that…. only it eliminates the pagan “she”, as part of the tale. It’s rather one-sided, don’t you think. It honors the creative being, while NOT honoring the creative earth. There’s no balance. Women are secondary players…even though THEY GIVE BIRTH. In pagan myth…it’s always the earth (she) who connects with the sky (he) and creates life born of her mud and his nuturing. There are MUCH BETTER creation myths than the bible’s version. In fact, to grade it on creativity alone..it would barely get a passing D-. It’s stilted and dull. But that’s the problem with the bible. It’s a book written by a few dozen people (or more), edited by untold hundreds, translated by unknown legions of translators — so, can’t be relied upon as “the word of god” only the words of man.
    We all know that men twist, change, distort, have their own agendas, and slant to get a better position. How can you take the words literally?
    It’s actions that matter, and the actions of people acting “christian” “muslim” “buddist” or “other” need to be looked at. But, beliefs are beliefs….and these are private matters, not something to be flaunted about or shoved down thy neighbors gullet.
    I think that the Christians are just pushing more words around. This attack on science is, in part, to undermine our educational system. In fact, if we look at ACTIONS, I don’t see (other than a few odd-ball sects) Christians NOT becoming Doctors, not using the health benefits afforded by science, and, not using the things which SCIENCE has provided. I don’t see Christians getting all huffy about vaccinations, or cancer research, or even using plastic products and/or petrol products. In fact, I don’t see Christians avoiding eating shellfish, and stoning people who have done forbidden things — things which ARE in the bible. And, what about the Deuteronomy. That’s in there, or was that just some mistake?
    In fact, seems to ME that the bible doesn’t talk about a lot of things, but it does talk about others that are IGNORED. Cite me some bible passages that say high-rise buildings are gods way, or that fertility technology is. Tell me how it’s fine for a Christian to spout on about how “god this” and “god that” when the bible constantly harps about how it’s wrong. See, Christians USE the bible to defend anything they want to defend, and to justify any horrid acts.
    This assault is a pissing contest to see who Christians can push around….starting with the school systems. Bush is using Christianity just as the big tele-evangelicals do…to get his way, to promote it above common sense, and all other ways, and to be on the “right side”, sort of like the right side of the Crusades.
    I’m just as sick of Christians pushing around their religion, as I am the gays pushing around their sexual preferences (and there is LITERALLY NO DIFFERENCE in the messages)….as a definition of “who they are”. Honestly, I do not care.
    You are all people, first. Not better, not worse than any other person walking the earth. The religion doesn’t make anyone special. In fact, if Christ were alive today, he’d probably cry at the things done “in is name”.
    Try and remember that. Let the educational system TEACH what is needed for us to compete in todays world market. Leave religion to be taught at home.

  3. T.C. Moore says:

    Perhaps the controversy partially stems from the fact that if you actually wanted to teach Intelligent Design – in order to expose other points of view – where else would you do it but Science class?

    Why can’t they spend 5 weeks on Evolution, and 5 hours on Intelligent Design? Here are the gazillion reasons why Evolution is a scientific theory, the evidence, the other things it explains (so much of our world doesn’t make sense without natural selection). And here is why Intelligent Design is not. That sounds instructive to me.

    I don’t suppose the ID people would accept that, though.

  4. Anthony says:

    Holy cow.

    First of all I think everyone in these comments need to take a step back. Take a deep breath, and shut up until you don’t feel the need to fight.

    First of all I love how you all try to blame Bush. This is nothing new (as you *should* all know from HS).

    http://www.answers.com/topic/scopes-trial

    So really in the end we are going back to something that has gone on for a very long time – But this time around instead of saying one of the two (both sides having a large amount of support) is right Bush wants to provide a choice.

    I’m still asking what is wrong with choice? Oh wait… I know this one! Because it’s Bush’s idea! (No that wasn’t directed at you John, but rather Democrat’s in general)

  5. Mark A. says:

    I think it’s funny that everyone is missing the main irony of this post: that Bush, of all people, is advocating the benefit of “exposing people to different schools of thought”!! This is the guy who lives in an information coccoon. The guy who ignored all of the people who offered criticism and alternatives to the invasion of Iraq. The guy whose administration destroys anyone who opposes their version of the truth. The guy who doesn’t read the newspapers because he gets “better” information from the people who surround him. Sheesh. I swear, if Darth Cheney told him the world was discovered to be flat, he’d be out on the stump the next day, selling it.

  6. JG says:

    So, a bunch of folks arguing over religion again. Such a can of worms it is for sure, eh? But I’ve found it’s a complete waste of time to try to debate anything with those who really seem to have made up their minds as to how the universe works whether they’re Hobo Jesuit philosophers or Physisist Islamic Rastas. They’ll simply come up with reasons to justify it, that’s all. Pretzel logic? Damn the torpedoes! There’s even been recent speculation that there might be a “religious gene” in some people. Interesting idea, but who knows, given the complexity of actually understanding human behavior.

    When I was a kid, I was taken to church, religious meetings, bible classes in school and whatnot, and I had always thought it was all some kind of strange mass fantasy, and a boring one, too (I still do). But some of us seem to have a kind of inate proclivity for jumping on board the faith bandwagon, and some do it in a drastic way, no matter how out-to-lunch their ideas might look to others. Although I agree that society needs moral codes to raise its children to be good and productive people, the kind of ideas that some of these folks trumpet makes one feel that the silly season has started again, hopefully not headed for just another rerun of the dark ages.

    But Lo! I have a little ‘theory’ here that might explain a little bit why people such as the ‘Intelligent Design’ crowd try to trash obvious realities about paleontology and whatnot, and keep saying that it was all created by some Really Smart Character Up There just a few thousand years ago:

    Human beings can’t get their minds around deep geologic time!

    Now, think about it, the general maximum length of a human lifetime is considered to be 100 years or so. One can look back in one’s later years and “feel” the length of time it took to get there. Try 1,000 years then. Oh, you can kind of cob that together from dates of history lessons, etc. but one has to start multiplying one’s own lifetime to really grok it. Now try comprehending 10,000 years… not so easy. A million years is 10,000 human lifetimes. You can’t do it! 100,000,000 years? It’s just a number. Forget it.

    Much, much easier just to accept from a dogma or whatever that it all happened in an interval closer to our own frame of reference.

    I was once at at a natural history musem with a friend, and we were looking at an exquisite complete fossil skeleton of a pterosaur, and my friend said, “I don’t believe that just happened all by itself.” I replied, “I think given all that time, and the conditions here on Earth, just about anything could have happened.” I realized, though, that he wasn’t buying it, no matter how anyone might try to explain it to him. You can show them the ‘calendar’ of the Earth’s history compressed into a year, and point out that all of human history is just the last few seconds before midnight on Dec. 31… It doesn’t matter… They’ll just come out and say something like, “That was thought up by infidels who read the wrong scripture. My _____ told me so”. (fill in the blank with priest, rabbi, imam etc. etc.)

    “If God didn’t exist, mankind would have had to invent Him” – Voltaire

    “A camel is a horse designed by a committee”. – overheard on the radio

  7. Richard says:

    Darwinian evolution is a scientific theory that makes concrete predictions about the world we see around us. Time and time again, those predictions have been correct. It only takes one find (e..g a human fossil aged 500 million years) to disprove the theory.

    Creationism is not disprovable, because there is NO piece of evidence that creationsits WOULD accept that their theory is incorrect.

    Evolution is science. Creationism is religion. Teach science in science class and creationism as part of religioues education. It’s up to students to decide which “world view” they prefer.

  8. Pat says:

    The problem with Behe’s probability theory is that he invented his own parameters. There is no agreed upon scientific basis for his work. His theory cannot be proved; therefore it is not a Scientific Theory. He has NO expertise or credibility in astronomy or the cosmos, physics, biology, physiology and anatomy, or genetics. He is a mathematician who can add one + one and get 1 ½. Even though he stated that the probability of evolution occurring is too astronomical to have occurred without divine intervention, he didn’t calculate the probability that divine intervention is also fictitious.

    The difference between creationists and evolutionists is that one finds truth in their faith while the other finds faith in the truth.

  9. B says:

    The point of a science education is to teach–stay with me here–SCIENCE!

    I’d have respect for “ID” if it took its lumps in the scientific community to become a viable, alternative scientific theory on origins. But it hasn’t. At every turn, it’s tried to weasel its way in through legislation or school boards because it can’t weather scientific scrutiny. I don’t want school boards–who aren’t populated by scientists but, rather according to Twain, Mencken, et al., dimwits–to make decisions about what is science.


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