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gravity Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-10-07 09:35 PM
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Don't Know Much About Biology
By Jerry Coyne

DON'T KNOW MUCH BIOLOGY

Suppose we asked a group of Presidential candidates if they believed in the existence of atoms, and a third of them said "no"? That would be a truly appalling show of scientific illiteracy, would it not? And all the more shocking coming from those who aspire to run a technologically sophisticated nation.

Yet something like this happened a week ago during the Republican presidential debate. When the moderator asked nine candidates to raise their hands if they "didn't believe in evolution," three hands went into the air—those of Senator Sam Brownback, Governor Mike Huckabee, and Representative Tom Tancredo. Although I am a biologist who has found himself battling creationism frequently throughout his professional life, I was still mortified. Because there is just as much evidence for the fact of evolution as there is for the existence of atoms, anyone raising his hand must have been grossly misinformed.

I don't know whether to attribute the show of hands to the candidates' ignorance of the mountain of evidence for evolution, or to a cynical desire to pander to a public that largely rejects evolution (more than half of Americans do). But I do know that it means that our country is in trouble. As science becomes more and more important in dealing with the world's problems, Americans are falling farther and farther behind in scientific literacy. Among citizens of industrialized nations, Americans rank near the bottom in their understanding of math and science. Over half of all Americans don't know that the Earth orbits the Sun once a year, and nearly half think that humans once lived, Flintstone-like, alongside dinosaurs.

Now maybe evolutionary biology isn't going to propel America into the forefront of world science, but creationism (and its gussied-up descendant "Intelligent Design") is not just a campaign against evolution—it's a campaign against science itself and the scientific method. By pretending that evolution is on shaky ground, and asserting that religion can contribute to our understanding of nature, creationists confuse people about the very form and character of scientific evidence. This confusion can only hurt our ability to make rational judgments about important social issues, like global warming, that involve science.

Senator Brownback showed this poisonous mixture of scientific ignorance and religious dogmatism in a May 31 op-ed piece in The New York Times ("What I Think About Evolution"), written to clarify why he raised his hand to dissent from Darwinism. The first thing that's clear is that Brownback displays a fundamental misunderstanding of evolutionary biology. He claims that there is "no one single theory of evolution," citing punctuated equilibrium as an alternative to Darwinism. (He's apparently implying that there might be something dubious about evolution because there's a multiplicity of theories).

More: http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/coyne07/coyne07_index.html
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KurtNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-10-07 10:01 PM
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1. they asked a lot of questions on the debate that had nothing to do with
what decisions they would make as president. And this was one of them.

Evolution and abortion are not things that the executive branch can do anything about. So interpretting the answers of these 3 depends on whether you think they honestly believe their answer or whether you think they were pandering to their base.
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William769 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-10-07 11:01 PM
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2. Neither did Sam Cooke.
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Crayson Donating Member (463 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-11-07 08:33 AM
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3. ...technologically sophisticated nation...
Edited on Mon Jun-11-07 08:35 AM by Crayson
The US has many very bright people.
But this sophistication doesn't permeate the whole society.
Many just take the goods as granted. Use a cellphone, go shopping...
Few have the technical knowledge to actually understand how these products work or what they are made of.

Wireless phones also work in deepest africa. For there people it is just a magic talking box.
For many westerners it's not much different anymore.

That's why people are so easily scared about stuff like electromagnetic radiation, genetics, and so on.
Science is advancing very fast, and many people (while reaping its fruits) haven't kept up with science.
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