Originally posted by: oogabooga
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Under the same token, I do not think evolution should be taught in schools. It is no more fact than creationism is, and is thus a religion.
problem is that your premises are wrong. evolution is far far far more factual then creationism could ever possibly hope to be.
Though i do not agree with the evolution as religion (it's one point i didn't agree with the poster) it isn't a solid basis of fact. As a scientific dogma evolution has a lot of holes.
It's a theory that is supported by infered observation. We've never observed evolution persay, but we've observed what can arguably be called the effects of it. It fits our current model and understanding of nature, but it can't be used and proven through expiriement. There is no universally accepted instance or proof that can be used to disclaim either evolution or creationism [i.e. no hey, the earth isn't flat since we just sailed around the world]
Actually, we have observed and reproduced the evolution of new characteristics and new species in both the lab and in nature.
However, we don't prove scientific theories, not even our most precisely verifified ones like general relativity. All we have are theories, like that of natural selection which explains evolution, that we haven't been able to disprove. We could disprove specific aspects of natural selection like common descent through the discovery of an example of an organism on Earth that didn't use DNA/RNA as its hereditary material and thus isn't related to the rest of us, but so far natural selection has passed all tests and predicted future discoveries like that of DNA. However, other theories to explain evolution, like Lamarck's theory of acquired characteristics have been disproven.
Creationism, on the other hand, isn't a scientific theory because there is no way to disprove it. It makes no predictions and offers no precise explanations about life that we can test. For this reason, it's absurd to teach creationism is any science class.
