Originally posted by ravells
What truly amazes me is that the rationality that was fought for so hard during the enlightenment and met its zenith with the founding fathers of the US has now been reduced to a superpower in which most people believe in some sort of divine being who will 'guide them', in which certain ex presidents make decisions based on their wives astrologer's decisions and it lookes like the good fight on the Scopes trial is going to be reversed because most of the people there don't even believe in evolution to the extent that they want 'intelligent design' (for which read creationism) to be part of the school curriculum. Such a shame. The march of unreason goes strong.
What truly amazes me is the arrogance of the monkeys on this planet that think a few hundred years of primitive science suddenly gives them the keys to the universe.
We take things like the Big Bang theory of the creation of the universe, the theory of evolution, or human caused global warming and through scientific consensus declare them to be scientific facts. This science is then taken as the gospel truth despite our inability to replicate any of it in accordance with the scientific method.
We, the masters of the human genome, have so far been unable to figure out how life appeared on this planet in the first place. We have been unable to take the elements of the primitive earth in a laboratory and create even the simplest single-cell life form from inanimate matter. The best we've been able to accomplish is to create some precursor amino acids and chemical compounds, yet we are supposed to take it as the gospel truth that life just appeared here one day and evolved on its own with no intelligence behind it. We're supposed to just accept that all these elements just got together on their own one day and became a life form - POOF - spontaneous generation. After that, everything else evolved from our spontaneously generated life form all on its own.
While I don't want to get into a discussion of religious dogma, it is quite obvious (to me anyway) that there is a lot going on around us that is outside the range of our human senses. I don't see the harm in pointing this out to children in school instead of feeding them just the current scientific consensus regarded as truth. I'm OK with telling kids that "we don't know" why something is the way it is, and maybe presenting some alternative ideas. I'm not for teaching a particular religion in public schools (no I dont think we need to teach the earth was created in 7 days), but I don't think it is a bad idea to maybe give kids the idea that there might be something else out there, and it might be a lot smarter than we are.
EagleDNY
$.02
"The smartest men learn enough to realize how much they will never know"