Judge Cuthbert W. Pound contributed by Peter Hodge
indeed I do, but creationism belongs in religous education whereas Evolution belongs in science
It is one of the founding principles of biology, paleontology, and several other fields of science.
Yes, most public schools will teach evolution in their life science classes, such as Biology. However, some states, especially those in the southern United States try to circumvent the law by avoiding the teaching of evolution altogether because of the controversy surrounding it.
The only thread of common bond among science, art and religion is Human Mind. Human mind created god and religion out of fear; human mind discovered the branch of study in the physical world and named it as science; human mind identified the aesthetic part of nature and nurtured it through art. The rest of all what is of science, art and religion are differences.
The event that publicly debated the subject of evolution and creationism and their place in education was the Scopes "Monkey" Trial in 1925. The trial took place in Tennessee and was centered around a high school teacher, John Scopes, who was accused of violating a state law that prohibited the teaching of evolution. The trial generated significant media attention and became a symbol of the larger debate between science and religion in the United States.
The role of science is neither to accept or reject religion. These are two separate areas of human endeavor.
Einar Thallackson has written: 'Science, evolution, religion' -- subject(s): Religion and science
although science does matter evolution might be true to some religion but not to all
Thornwell Jacobs has written: 'The new science and the old religion' -- subject(s): Religion and science, Evolution
Frank Lewis Marsh has written: 'Evolution, creation and science' -- subject(s): Religion and science, Evolution, Creation
For religion, God. For science, evolution.
Herman Brunswick Kipper has written: 'Christianity and the gamut of evolution' -- subject(s): Evolution, Miscellanea, Religion and science, Science
Science vs. Religion Evolution vs. Creationism
Howard MacQueary has written: 'The evolution of man and Christianity' -- subject(s): Religion and science, Evolution, Christianity, Doctrinal Theology
John F. Haught has written: 'Science and Religion' -- subject(s): Religion and science, History 'God after Darwin' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Evolutietheorie, Theologie, Evolution, Geloof en wetenschap, Christianity 'Making sense of evolution' -- subject(s): Evolution, Christianity 'The cosmic adventure' -- subject(s): Religion and science 'God After Darwin' -- subject(s): Christianity, Evolution, Religious aspects, Religious aspects of Evolution 'Mystery and promise' -- subject(s): Mystery, Revelation, Promises, God 'Deeper Than Darwin'
Science is known while religion is unknown.Science is physically proven while reliogion is mentally proven. Thus science is in the past while religion is in the future. However, both science and religion does not raise the standard of human evolution and the middle path between these two extremes is 'spiritual'. A spiritual journey travel inwards while science and religion delve on outwardly matters.
Hubert Vecchierello has written: 'Science and philosophy' -- subject(s): Philosophy, Science 'Einstein and relativity' -- subject(s): Cosmology, Relativity (Physics) 'Evolution - fact or fancy?' -- subject(s): Evolution, History, Religion and science