Meadmaker
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- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
- Messages
- 29,033
In the USA at least, where there is a very high proportion of practising Christians who do believe that the bible is inerrant and that every word is true, you could not possibly have school science teachers telling the class that God did not create any humans. Because if you did that you'd instantly have millions of Christian parents rioting on the streets (attacking the schools and attacking the parliament etc.). It would be utter madness to try that.
But science classes don't need to spell it out anyway. If they teach evolution (which they should), and explain how we learn things from unearthing fossils and how we can date those remains to hundreds of thousands, or even hundreds of millions of years old, then the conclusion is obvious for every pupil in the class ... it's obvious that what we have discovered from science is incompatible with what people believed 2000 years ago about gods and miracles etc.
I think if you do the second paragraph properly, you are doing the first paragraph as well.
And while we have some rather unscientific beliefs widespread in the United States, It really isn't as bad as you describe. Teaching evolution has been going on for quite some time, including teaching that Genesis is not literally true, and somehow we haven't seen any street riots that I can remember.