The school of creationism

Was the landscape around the small town of Dover in Pennsylvania created in just six days? Were the gently curving hills perfected, the streams formed and finished, the wide, empty skies fixed in place beneath the firmament and the narrow wooded valleys completed? Was it all really done in less than a week?

It was, at least according to the creationist beliefs of much of the town’s population of 1,800, who have little time for Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. And their fundamental beliefs are set to gain further currency.

As of next month, in a hugely controversial move, the town’s high school will become the first in the US for several generations to teach a form of creationism as part of its curriculum.

But the controversy that has split the town of Dover, an hour’s drive north of Baltimore, is not simply some local squabble. Rather it is a debate that is taking place in communities across the US.
Full Article: independent.co.uk

One Response to “The school of creationism”

  1. i Says:

    I find the intelligent design argument very intriguing actually. Many of us believe in the spiritual, intelligent and justice of the universe. I think this is an issue that our weirdo culture is not fit to tackle in the present frame of discourse. The evolution versus creationism debate is so dualistic and warped IMO.

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