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Kansas Deletes Evolution from State Science Test
Talkback Live Transcript
August 16, 1999
Aired August 16, 1999 - 3:00 p.m. ET
BARRY LYNN, SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE: This act by the Kansas
State Board
of Education took Kansas back 100 years in science teaching and
education, and I
hope the courts will be the ones who force them to correct the
decision.
GARY DEMAR, AMERICAN VISION: You cannot apply the scientific method
to
evolution. It has never been observed. You cannot repeat the
experiment, and so
what is being sold as science, in terms of evolution, really isn't
science in
terms of the way they define it.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: The amendment passes.
BOBBIE BATTISTA, HOST: Is the Kansas state school board making a
monkey out of
evolution? The board says schools are no longer required to teach
the theory of
evolution, but it did not go so far as to ban it.
It's a new tactic in a nearly 100-year battle between evolutionists
and
creationists. Where and when did life begin, and how did mankind
enter into the
picture?
Evolution gets the ax, but is a larger agenda at work here in the
battle between
science and religion?
Good afternoon, everybody, and welcome to TALKBACK LIVE.
Where did we come from? How did we get here, and how did it all
begin? These are
the fundamental questions both science and religion attempt to
answer. It has
been nearly 75 years since the so-called "Scopes Monkey Trial"
brought the
conflict between creationism and evolution into the national
spotlight. Why is
it still being fought today?
Let's first chat with Melissa Bruener about the Kansas school board
decision.
She's an anchor with CNN affiliate WIBU in Topeka, Kansas, where she
-- WIBW,
rather, in Topeka, Kansas, where she covers the state house among
other things
as well as the religion beat.
Melissa, thanks for joining us.
MELISSA BRUENER, WIBW-TV ANCHOR: Good afternoon. Thank you.
BATTISTA: We have to say that most of the headlines on this story
were are not
entirely correct, we have learned today. And so the question I'm
going to pose
to you is did the Kansas board of education delete references to
evolution in
the state science curricula or not?
BRUENER: Not entirely; you're right. It has been kind of a confusing
thing,
because nationwide people are hearing that Kansas students will no
longer be
learning about evolution and that's not entirely true. What the
state board of
education did, however, do was vote to remove any questions on the
theory of
evolution from our statewide science assessment test.
What that means is that local districts can still teach evolution in
their
science classes.
BATTISTA: But the theory being about those who are opposed to this,
that if
students are not required to answer questions about this on a test,
then
teachers may not bother to teach it?
BRUENER: That's right. When you talk about a curriculum that states
develop for
their schools to teach, of course, it would stand to reason that
schools are
going to focus on those things that the students will be tested on
in the
assessment test: so the feeling being that local districts may
decide that since
the theory of evolution isn't going to be on the assessment test,
teachers may
instead decide to focus on something else and not teach about the
theory of
evolution, just because it won't be on that assessment test.
BATTISTA: Have you talked to some teachers throughout the state?
BRUENER: We have, especially here in the Topeka area, our local
school
districts. And the general feeling seems to be that at this point
the board of
education's decision isn't going to have an impact on them. Their
feeling is
that tests like the SAT and the ACT will still address evolution, so
they are
still going to go ahead and teach it in the schools right now. The
feeling from
one biology teacher who develops the curriculum, the science
curriculum at one
of the local high schools here is that you can't teach biology
without teaching
the theory of evolution. So therefore, he will go forward and teach
it in his
classes.
However, he is careful to say that he does, when he brings the topic
up in
class, say this is one theory among many out there. So he says he is
careful
with the way he approaches evolution in his classroom.
BATTISTA: Melissa, stay with us, if you will. I'm going to bring two
other
people into the conversation. Eugenie Scott is executive director of
the
National Center for Science Education, and Phillip Johnson is a
professor of law
at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of the
book Darwin on
Trial.
Welcome to both of you.
EUGENIE SCOTT, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, NATIONAL CENTER FOR SCIENCE
EDUCATION: Thank
you.
BATTISTA: Eugenie, let me start with you, if I can. Before we get
into the
larger debate on the core issue here, let's talk about how this may
affect
students in the Kansas City school system. Do you see this as a sort
of slippery
slope in a way? Are the kids going to be at a disadvantage?
SCOTT: Your commentator was talking about the Topeka system, and
there -- what I
have found at looking at this controversy over the years is that
teaching of
evolution is not so much of a problem in the big city, big towns of
the United
States, it's a problem in the suburbs and small towns. And without a
state
science standard to hide behind, so to speak, an awful lot of
teachers are going
to be intimidated because of local pressure against teaching
evolution, and they
will simply drop it from the curriculum.
It's easier to do it that way and you don't have Mrs. Brown standing
on your
desk the next day because you've taught little Jimmy about
evolution.
BATTISTA: Mr. Johnson, what is your objection to evolution being
taught in the
public schools?
PHILLIP JOHNSON, AUTHOR, "DARWIN ON TRIAL": I think we should teach
a lot about
evolution. In fact, I think we should teach more than the
evolutionary science
teachers want the students to know. The problem is what we're
getting is a
philosophy that's claimed to be scientific fact, a lot of distortion
in the
textbooks, and all the difficult problems left out, because they
don't want
people to ask tough questions.
This is indoctrination not genuine science education, which should
teach people
to raise those tough questions and to look at the philosophy and
separate the
philosophical claims from the real facts. That's the kind of
education we need,
and there's a public protest that is going on that wants to get that
kind of
education.
BATTISTA: You know what? Could you be a little bit more specific for
us, because
you're speaking very generally?
JOHNSON: Sure, I'll be very specific. There is a claim being made as
fact that
science has discovered a mechanism which has been tested and can be
shown
capable of creating the enormously complex things that we call
living organisms.
The evidence is, in fact, totally inadequate for that. It's
basically a
philosophical claim, and if people think that that goes way beyond
the available
evidence, in my opinion they're right to think so. And in any case,
they ought
to be able to challenge it. So this is really a growing public
protest against
dogmatism and the imposition of a naturalistic philosophy in the
name of science
education.
BATTISTA: So is your goal then not to have education taught in the
public
schools and to have creationism taught instead?
JOHNSON: No, as I said, my goal is to teach a lot more about the
controversy and
why the subject is controversial and why so many people having
growing doubts.
Instead, what we're getting is this is the official line. Believe
it. You're
just supposed to just accept it because we say it's true. And that's
not the
real science education.
BATTISTA: OK, let me ask Miss Scott if she has a problem with that?
SCOTT: Well, I obviously have a different interpretation of what's
going on. Ten
years ago, anti-evolutionists were saying we'll teach evolution but
teach
something called "creation science" to balance it out. There was a
court
decision that said teaching creation science is advocating evolution
in the
public schools. Public schools are supposed to be religiously
neutral. You can't
do it.
So now what they're saying is, OK, teach evolution but teach the
arguments
against evolution. Give the kids all the evidence.
As a scientist, I don't know any scientific arguments against
evolution, but
when you ask the proponents of this idea, what exactly are you
planning to
teach? It turns out to be the old crummy science of creation science
that they
tried to pass off on us ten years ago.
I think there's a lot of concern in the general public that if a
child learns
evolution, this child is going to give up his faith in God, and this
is simply
not the case. I do not see, in my discussions with K-12 teachers
around the
country -- and that's what I do for a living. I talk with these
teachers a lot
-- I do not see the teachers are saying here's all the evidence for
evolution.
Now take your religion and shove it. What I see is teachers saying
here's all
the evidence for evolution, here's why scientists accept that
creatures shared
common ancestry, and you can accept it or not. You can believe it or
not.
BATTISTA: I haven't seen much evidence of that in the last 60 years
myself, but,
Melissa, before you go, where is this going to end up? Is this going
to end up
on the governor's desk or in the courts or...
BRUENER: It's hard to say. It really is. What happened, and what
this grew out
of was, you know, the gentleman on your panel mentioned
philosophical issues,
and that's sort of what it grew out of. Our state board of education
has an even
split right now between conservatives and moderates, and that grew
into, as they
were developing the statewide science assessment test, this debate
over whether
or not to teach evolution, because does that then say that its the
end-all,
be-all theory that's out there.
The governor is opposed to what the state board of education
decided. There has
been some concern here in our state about whether the state board of
education
is needed at all, and that discussion may come up when the legislate
session
begins in January again: Do we need our state board of education?
Look what they
did. You know, this is gaining national attention. We've had a
company who
decided to write Kansas off the list of places where they might
relocate their
headquarters to because of this issue. So it has had national
implications.
We're just going to have to wait and see, and see if any of the
districts out
there are going to take this as -- or take the next step with this
and decide
not to teach evolution.
Again, right now, we have not seen that happening. Most of the
schools are
saying we're going to go ahead as we have been and continue to teach
it.
BATTISTA: All right, we have to take a break. Melissa Bruener from
our
affiliate, WIBW, thanks so much for joining us today, appreciate it.
BRUENER: Thank you.
BATTISTA: And we'll continue with the debate in just a moment.
In 1925, teacher John T. Scopes stood trial in Tennessee for
teaching evolution.
The "Scopes Monkey Trial" resulted in Scopes being convicted and
fined $100.
The verdict was later reversed on a technicality by the state
supreme court.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BATTISTA: Welcome back.
Let's take a phone call at this point. Jack in South Carolina is on
the phone
with was. Jack, go ahead.
JACK: Yes, teaching creationism in the schools is just another
attempt of
Christians trying to force Christianity on non-Christians. There is
absolutely
no evidence to support the story of creationism. It's just that, a
story,
actually an ancient fairy tale.
BATTISTA: Jack, thanks very much.
We should remind you that the Supreme Court says you cannot, at this
point,
teach creationism in the schools.
Mr. Johnson, let me ask you something basic: How do you think the
world began?
JOHNSON: How the world began? Evolution of biology..
BATTISTA: Or the universe, whatever.
JOHNSON: ... is the story of life. What I think is that...
BATTISTA: OK, the universe, whatever. What is your philosophy on how
it all
began?
JOHNSON: Yes, life requires an intelligent cause. You can't turn
non-living
chemicals into a living organism by chemical laws and chance, and
natural
selection, the claimed Darwinian mechanism of creationism, doesn't
have any
creative power.
If you look at the evidence of science objectively and not through
naturalistic
philosophical blinders, you'll see that that's the case. Life looks
like it was
intelligently designed, as even the Darwinists concede, and the
reason is
because it was. Now we don't know much about the details --
certainly I don't --
but I don't think we should impose a dogma on all education that
goes against
the evidence, that says you don't need a creator because
unintelligent material
forces can do and did do all the creating, and that's exactly what's
being done.
BATTISTA: So when you say "intelligently designed" or "an
intelligent cause,"
you're kind of speaking around there. By whom? By what?
JOHNSON: Well, the evidence of science can't tell us very much about
the nature
of the intelligent designer. Of course, I think it's God, if that's
what you're
asking, but you need information from more than science to know
anything that's
really worth knowing about God. What you learn from science is that
unintelligent, purposeless, material forces, like mutation and
selection, can't
do the job that they're claimed to be doing...
BATTISTA: Well, what I...
JOHNSON: ... and that just comes from the scientific evidence.
BATTISTA: What I'm hearing from you, then, is that evolution could
possibly be
God's idea.
JOHNSON: Well, if by evolution you just mean a gradual process that
took a long
time, then certainly it could be guided by God, and it would then be
a creation
mechanism. But that's not what is being taught, and that's not what
our
evolutionary science community teaches. What they teach is that
evolution is
unguided. It operates solely by impersonal natural laws of chance,
and so we are
the accidental products of a materialistic universe in which we
might just as
well not have come to exist. That's what the implication is.
Now, it's not all told right at the start. The kids get it bit by
bit, until
they get the full story, but that's what all the leading
evolutionary scientists
preach when the coast is clear. This reassuring, we're not saying
anything about
God, only comes when they are dealing with public reaction and
trying to quiet
it.
BATTISTA: So, Ms. Scott, is it all by chance that we are here at
this stage that
we're at today?
SCOTT: What is taught in science class is this what happened, not
who done it.
If you have ideas that the universe was intelligently designed or
created by God
or that your ancestors came out of a hole in the San Francisco
mountains called
the Sipapu, which is what the Hopi believed, that is a religious
explanation.
There is nothing wrong with that, but it's not science. All science
tells you is
that the best explanation we have for why plants and animals look
like they do
today and where human beings came from is that we shared common
ancestors back
in the past. And that's all that's being taught. This idea that
somehow
evolution has become this materialist philosophy that is being
crammed down
students' throats is nonsense.
BATTISTA: Let me get a little audience reaction here, Norma?
NORMA: I don't think it should be taught, because it's not a proven
theory.
BATTISTA: Evolution, you mean?
NORMA: Evolution is not a proven theory.
BATTISTA: But is creationism a proven?
NORMA: The world had to be created by a higher intelligence than we
have. And I
believe that the theory of God is a proven theory.
BATTISTA: Where is the evidence, Mr. Johnson? Is there any stronger
evidence
that creationism is, indeed, fact over evolution?
JOHNSON: Well, creationism is a loaded word, which is usually used
to refer to
Biblical literalism. I'm talking about is something much broader,
which is
intelligent design, and, yes, there's plenty of evidence for this.
It's given in
books published by academic publishers, like Cambridge University
Press, and by
other scholars, scientists, philosophers in the intelligent design
movement,
which I represent, and which is carrying this issue into the
universities and
into the mainstream public discussion. So, what we really want is
honest
teaching of the controversy. In a way, that's what you're trying to
do with this
program, is give different views a chance to be heard, give people a
chance to
question the evidence and to challenge the experts, and not have
this shoved
down their throat the way that it's being done in a doctrinaire and
a
propagandistic manner.
BATTISTA: Would God like this intelligent designer theory, or would
he prefer
that it's more literal?
JOHNSON: Well, that's quite another question, and it doesn't go into
my
position. What tends to happen, whenever you try to raise an issue
on this
subject, is that people want to turn the conversation to the Bible,
because they
know how to deal with that. They want to find some way to ridicule
the Biblical
story, say it is fantasy -- you've seen people come in -- or say
it's not
science, by which they mean it's not true; it's fantasy. I don't
want to talk
about that. I don't think there is any need to bring the Bible into
this. Let's
just look at the scientific evidence and see objectively what it
shows and what
it doesn't show. And if we do that, the neo-Darwinian orthodoxy is
going to
collapse of its own internal contradictions. You can't prove that on
a TV
program, but that's what's going to happen when we get an unbiased
discussion of
this in the appropriate public venues.
BATTISTA: To the audience again, Glenn?
GLENN: Well, one thing that I don't understand is, our country is
founded on
freedom of choice, so why can't we teach both of them, since they
are widely
accepted theories, and then let the person choose on their own?
BATTISTA: Let me have Ms. Scott answer that first. I want you to
both answer
that. Why can't they both be taught, side by side?
SCOTT: I think that we should teach about religion in the public
schools. I
think we should teach about the various forms of Christianity, about
Hinduism,
about Native American beliefs, of which there are many, but that's
different
then saying we should advocate any of these views as being true and
supported by
empirical evidence.
People have to realize that science is a limited way of knowing.
We're just
trying to explain the natural world and we limit ourselves to
explaining the
natural world with natural processes. When we do this, it looks
very, very much
like the history of the planet and history living things has been
one that
changed through time and that living things shared common ancestors.
Now, many religious traditions have looked at this, and said, that's
the way God
wanted to do it. Other religious traditions have said, no, we
believe, as Phil
was saying, that the Bible is literally true. God created all the
kinds of
animals at the same, and that they didn't share common ancestry.
Those are all
religious beliefs that are in addition to science.
And, you know, what do you teach in a science class? You teach
science, and we
shouldn't really turn the science class into a political forum, in
which we're
trying to meet everybody's religious views. It just is not going to
work.
BATTISTA: Mr. Johnson, I have to take a quick commercial break, and
I'll get
your answer to that question when we come back.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BATTISTA: Let me go to Phil Johnson, to ask him about whether he
thinks both can
be taught successfully in the public school system.
JOHNSON: It's really just a question of what the scientific evidence
shows. I
think we should stick to scientific evidence and not go off into
folk ways. But
you know, the world's leading Darwinist, Richard Dawkins, says at
the start of
one of his books, that biology is the study of extremely complicated
things that
look as if they were designed for a purpose. Francis Crick, another
of the most
famous Darwinist, says biologists constantly have to remind
themselves that what
they are studying was not designed, it evolved. Now, we think that
the reason
those organisms look as if they were designed by a creator, is that
is, in fact,
the case. Now, that's a question of what the evidence shows, and you
ought to be
able to have fair-minded discussion of what the evidence shows and
what it
doesn't show, and how philosophical prejudices may be coloring the
way some
people view the evidence. So, that's really what we stand for, in
the
intelligent design movement, is an open philosophy of science that
allows
freedom of thought, freedom of inquiry and freedom of discussion,
and it's quite
a battle to try to get that established.
BATTISTA: Go ahead, in the audience, Siwonka?
SIWONKA: OK. I would just like to say that what we was talking about
earlier --
I mean, dealing with evolution -- you made the comment that you --
we could be
created in God's image and still have evolved. That negates itself.
Evolution is
a process. God created and made. OK. And evolution, itself,
sometimes when
scientists -- the way they describe -- we found these ancient
artifacts, these
bones. There has been written proof that the bones they find don't
even belong
to so-called Cro-Magnon man.
So, as we stated earlier, you cannot just put forth some of your
beliefs, or
your theories, and make that fact and just teach it. I mean, give
creationism a
chance, too. We came here, our forefathers on this country, because
of religion
oppression. Now, you come and here, and you're still oppressed. You
take all
religion out of school, everything is broken loose. It's supposed to
be a fact;
it's not a fact.
And when you really sit down, research and look at things, evolution
has a lot
of holes in it, just as those would say creationism does also. So,
they're both
theories. Teach both. Give us a freedom of choice. That's America.
You have the
right to choose.
BATTISTA: Ms. Scott, we haven't talked about the theories of
evolution or the
interpretation there of. I mean, there isn't just one concrete
theory of
evolution, is there?
SCOTT: No. There is the general overall idea that the universe has
had a
history, that galaxies have changed, that planets have changed, that
stars
evolve, that life on Earth evolves. Evolution is an awful lot more
than just man
evolved from monkeys, which is what most people think when they hear
the word
evolution.
If you say, well, evolution didn't take place, you are undermining
virtually all
of modern-day science, from physics to chemistry, to geology, to
biology,
anthropology, even history. Nobody is saying that God didn't create.
What we can
say is that the evidence that we have science, which is limited,
suggests to us
very strongly that the universe has had a history, that things
changed through
time, they were not created all at one time, and that living things
also shared
common ancestry.
This can be taught, and in my experience, is almost uniformly taught
at the K-12
level without philosophical overtones, without the assumption that
you have to
give up your faith in God.
I wish people could understand that. I think they would find that
their fear and
loathing of evolution is really unnecessary.
BATTISTA: Let me go to the audience and Lyn here.
LYN: I just think it's unfortunate that in this country and I guess
really in
this world today we have to be right or wrong about every issue. Why
can't the
answer lie somewhere in the balance? Why can't God work through a
scientific
process? I believe in creation, but why does saying that mean that I
have to
believe that it took six days? Why couldn't it take 600 million
years and the
processes work along with that?
BATTISTA: Good question. We have to take a break, and at this time,
Eugenie
Scott and Phillip Johnson, we thank you both very much for joining
us today.
Appreciate it.
In a moment, God and science: Is everyone who believes in evolution
an atheist?
We'll talk about that in a moment.
(APPLAUSE)
Australian scientists say they have found evidence that complex life
forms
existed on earth 2.7 billion years ago, up to a billion years
earlier than was
thought. The report came out last week in the journal "Science," two
days after
the Kansas school board decision.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BATTISTA: We are talking about evolution and creationism, and
joining us now is
Robert Russell, executive director and founder of the Center for
Theology and
Natural Science, and Duane Gish, senior vice president of the
Institute for
Creation Research.
Mr. Russell, let me start with you. Please tell us that there is a
way to marry
theology and natural science.
ROBERT RUSSELL, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND FOUNDER, CENTER FOR THEOLOGY
AND NATURAL
SCIENCE: Well, the simplest way is to say what some of your viewers
already
said: Evolution is God's way of creating. God creates the universe
continuously
through love and freedom, and provides the beauty of nature. And
science teaches
us about that just like physics teaches us about the laws of the
planets and
about cosmology, which is also part of God' creation.
So it's not creation versus science. It's a creation interpretation
of science,
which as a Christian I would give.
BATTISTA: Mr. Gish, do you have a problem with that?
DUANE GISH, INSTITUTE FOR CREATION RESEARCH: Yes, I do have a
problem with that.
There are several issues that I would like to address here that have
been
discussed already today. The fact, what is the nature of science,
first of all?
Secondly, can creation science be taught in public schools? And
thirdly, do we
have scientific evidence for creation?
Now, science is our study of the real world as it now exists. We use
only
natural laws and natural processes, of course, in our attempt to
understand and
explain the operation of the universe or the operation of living
things. But
evolutionists insist that we use these same natural law and
processes to explain
the origin of the universe, the origin of life, the origin of all
living things.
Now, you cannot do that.
You see, these events happened in the unobservable past. They're not
repeatable
in the present.
BATTISTA: But so did the creationist theory, didn't it?
GISH: That's true. Both creation and evolution, neither is a
scientific theory.
They are theories about history. To insist, as Dr. Scott does, that
we can only
teach evolution in the schools because that's science -- creation is
religion --
know that is not true.
Now, according to the Supreme Court, can creation be taught in the
public
schools, following the Louisiana decision? Actually Professor
Zimmerman, for
example, in bioscience, October 1987, after the Louisiana decision,
he said
this: The Supreme Court did not in any way outlaw the teaching of
creation
science. Dr. Scott, herself, in her letter to the editor of "Nature"
magazine,
following that decision, she said...
BATTISTA: OK. Let me ask you this, though, because you're losing us
a little
bit. What -- when you say creation science -- and the Supreme Court
refers to it
as creation science -- what do they mean?
GISH: They mean the scientific evidence that supports creation. That
is what
we're talking about when we mean creation science. We don't mean the
Bible. We
don't mean the book of Genesis.
BATTISTA: OK. Let me ask Mr. Scott -- Mr. Russell...
GISH: She herself -- let me say this, first...
BATTISTA: Let me ask Mr. Russell, though, what he believes creation
science to
be.
RUSSELL: Creation science is a pseudoscience. It's actually religion
in
disguise.
Good science can study historical phenomena. If you said you
couldn't say
historical phenomena, you couldn't have science of big bang
cosmology, because
that studies the past of the universe. If you rule out evolution,
you rule out
astronomy, cosmology. You rule out human genetics. You rule out
geology,
planetary formation.
All of science would crumble if you say you can't study events in
the past.
BATTISTA: How can you rule out all these things?
RUSSELL: Because these are about events in the past.
BATTISTA: No. I mean Mr. Gish.
GISH: That, of course, is nonsense. Our scientific evidence for
creationism is
based upon the facts of science, the fossil record, the laws of
thermodynamics,
the laws of probability, all of the important evidence that we have
relating to
the subject of origin. Of course, we use only science. Now, let me,
for example,
mention the fossil record. Evolutionists believe that some
invertebrate evolved
into a fish over millions of years of time. We have billions times
billions of
fossils of complex invertebrates. We have billions and billions of
fossil
fishes.
Now, if an invertebrate evolved into a fish, we ought to have
billions times
billions of fossils of transition form showing an invertebrate
changing into a
fish. As a matter of fact, we have none. Every major kind of fish
that we know
anything about appears fully formed. There is not a trace of an
ancestor for any
of these major kinds of fishes, and there are no connecting forms,
connecting
one kind of fish to another. Now, that's the historical evidence and
it supports
creationism, precisely what we'd expect and predict, but it's
absolutely
incompatible with evolutionary theory.
BATTISTA: Mr. Russell?
RUSSELL: Well, I think it shows why it's so important to have the
community of
scientists, the biological community decide what is good science,
and they have.
That's the neo-Darwinian theory of evolution. And it shows why it's
so important
to teach it in high school, because if we don't, we'll get
pseudo-science, such
as Mr. Gish is giving us, which is actually a religious point of
view and a
philosophical point of view taught as science, which would be the
end of good
science education. I -- when my kids were in high school, I wanted
the best for
them in terms of science education, theories of economics, theories
of political
justice, and so on. And I think if we give up on good science, we
give up on an
awful lot of stuff that really counts for our kids.
BATTISTA: We have to go to commercial break. As we do, a comment
from Magda.
MAGDA: I think, on a very elementary level, one of the problems we
have with
such controversies is that we're becoming increasingly ethnocentric
and very
intolerant, which could eventually lead to violence, and we've seen
places of
violence. And I speak as a Lebanese-American Christian, and I would
like to have
both theories taught in schools.
BATTISTA: All right. We'll be -- continue in just a second.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BATTISTA: And welcome back. You know, this is a lot more a political
tug of war,
I think, than it is scientific, in many respects, with an awful lot
of children
caught in the middle. Laura, from Missouri, here in our audience, is
a teacher.
She is, also, an anthropologist, and you have some thoughts about
the kids.
LAURA: Well, like this lady over here was saying, she would -- she
said that we
don't give students enough credit for thinking about the ideas of
creationism
and evolutionism, and as a teacher in a public school system, I know
that we are
not allowed to teach about creationism, but when the subjects come
up in the
classroom, you have to address them. You can't just ignore the
questions that
the kids have. And we don't have all the answers, and as the case
with
evolution, it's constantly changing. The scientific facts of what I
learned 15
years ago in school have changed considerably through time. So, we
have to just
keep making ourselves available to all the information that's coming
out there,
and be willing to have an open mind to address the questions kids
have.
BATTISTA: Mr. Gish, can you be a Christian and believe in evolution?
GISH: Yes. You can be a Christian and believe in evolution. However,
my comment
about atheistic evolution -- she's dead wrong twice. She's dead
wrong on his
theology, and dead wrong on his science. Now, it was just mentioned
that you
can't legally teach creation. I want to make very clear, you can
teach creation
in public schools. Now, you cannot compel teachers to do that, but
they have the
legal right to do that. I have just, Eugenie Scott, Dr. Scott, who's
on this
program, she, herself, said that you can legally teach creation
science in
public schools. Stephen Jay Gould of Harvard University, famous
evolutionist, he
said, following the Louisiana decision, you can teach creation
science in public
schools. It is legal, and I quoted professor Zimmerman (ph) to the
same effect.
It is legal. Now, you cannot compel a teacher to do it.
BATTISTA: I have another lawyer in the audience. Let's get her take
on it,
Keisha?
KEISHA: I just feel that, you know, the experts are not giving kids
enough
credit for thinking for themselves. Kids are so much smarter
nowadays than
adults give them credit for, and if you present both issues, I think
kids
nowadays can make the distinction between what they want to believe
and what not
to. So, you're just assuming that, by giving both theories, that
children are
somehow going to be psychologically damaged by something. Give them
both
theories, let them make the choice, and if they want to discuss it
further, go
home and talk about it. But it should not such a pressing issue, as
far as
teaching both theories in school.
BATTISTA: Let me ask a young person in the audience. Stephen, what
do you think?
STEPHEN: Well, I'll tell you right now, I believe in God and I
believe in
evolution, and I believe God made it so that we'll eventually, like,
change.
I'll take a look at my body on, you know, those little -- in school
I'll see
maps or pictures of the human body and I'll see body parts that
aren't used
anymore, and I think evolution will eventually rule that those body
parts will
stop appearing, and new ones will eventually, if our environment
changes, will
eventually grow.
BATTISTA: So, you're taking the theory -- you think man is still
evolving?
STEPHEN: Yes.
BATTISTA: OK. What about that, Mr. Gish? Is man still evolving, and
where is
God's hand in that?
GISH: Well, there are many animals on this earth that have been here
supposedly
for millions of years, and yet there is not one single example,
anywhere on the
earth, of one creature beginning to becoming something else.
Now, here's the false teaching that this young man just mentioned,
the idea that
we have vestigial organs in our bodies that are left over from our
evolutionary
ancestors. He has been taught that we have gill slits -- the embryo,
human
embryo has gill slits. That's a thoroughly discredited theory. It's
known to be
false. Evolutionists, themselves, know it's false, and yet it's in
our biology
books today, taught to our children, that here is powerful evidence
for
evolution, which is totally false, and you see, we need to let these
students
know that. We need to let them know that that there's no vestigial
organs in
humans. And this other evidence that they're being taught, that...
BATTISTA: I'll be honest with you, I don't think most kids remember
that out of
their biology class. I don't -- Mr. Russell, are we -- is
evolutionary science
that off base?
GISH: Well, this young man...
RUSSELL: Of course not. That's part of the propaganda of
creationists
The issue is simple: Your audience is concerned with freedom of
choice, looking
at competing theories, and I support that very much. I think we have
a political
right and a moral duty to look at competing theories. But the
question is which
theories constitute science.
Now, we have competing theories in evolution about the evolutionary
processes.
But Scientific Creationism and Intelligent Design are not competing
scientific
theories. They're pseudoscience. I wouldn't want to see them taught
any more
than I'd say, in an astronomy course, teach astrology, too, or teach
that the
sun goes around the earth, because that's a theory too. There are
certain things
that are not good science, but it is important for Christians, Jews,
Moslems,
Native Americans, to have a moral view about science and to consider
its
implications. Those are very important. I support the reflection of
Christians
and Jews and Moslems and atheists on science.
BATTISTA: Got to take a break. We'll be back.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BATTISTA: Very cute,that Internet message there.
Let me go to the audience for some reaction -- Richard.
RICHARD: I support the teaching of evolution in schools because I
believe that
by giving the children the knowledge and the background that will
give them the
facility to explore and debate it by themselves, they'll be able to
tap into the
existing information we have through the findings that have been
made in Kenya
and neighboring countries like Ethiopia that have taken the theory
of evolution
back billions of years. They will be able to think it out for
themselves and
come and taking up from where the discoveries that have been made in
Kenya have
reached, be able to explain it even better for us as the years go
by.
BATTISTA: Mr. Gish, do you have no faith in the evidence supporting
evolution?
GISH: There is -- are evidences or arguments on both sides, but I am
absolutely
convinced the massive weight of the evidence strongly supports
creation. There
are facts from the fossil record, from the laws of thermodynamics,
the laws of
probability that renders evolutionary theory impossible. Not only
impossible,
but the evidence has shown that it has not happened, it is not a
historical
process, it cannot be supported by history, it cannot be supported
by the
natural laws and processes now operating in this universe.
BATTISTA: We are entirely out of time. I'm so sorry to interrupt.
And we
certainly aren't going to solve this weighty issue on this hour, but
we thank
both of our guests for being with us today. This half hour: Robert
Russell and
Duane Gish, thank you much.
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