So you went there anyway."Silly" isn't synonymous to "funny", which is the point. But you're right, it is just semantics, so there's no need to get into a debate over it.
So you went there anyway.silly things have to be trivial and trivial things can't be dangerous.
Nobody would expect that.
You can't be serious. Why is this even considered a viable question. We've had far vto much experience with people being punished for "wrong" belief. This gives rise to thoughts about Inquisition, show trials and terror.
Isn't the past several thousand years enough to deter us from thinking that punishing wrong belief is bad idea.
You can't be serious. Why is this even considered a viable question. We've had far vto much experience with people being punished for "wrong" belief. This gives rise to thoughts about Inquisition, show trials and terror.
Isn't the past several thousand years enough to deter us from thinking that punishing wrong belief is bad idea.
Originally Posted by Pacal
You can't be serious. Why is this even considered a viable question. We've had far vto much experience with people being punished for "wrong" belief. This gives rise to thoughts about Inquisition, show trials and terror.
Isn't the past several thousand years enough to deter us from thinking that punishing wrong belief is bad idea.
On the contrary, it encourages that thought.
What of teachers who tell their students that evolution isn't valid, but creationism is valid? I am under the impression that's what the OP is asking. Not that any Joe off the street should be arrested for his opinion, but that it shouldn't be taught in schools as fact.
I don't know that it should be a crime, per se, but as others have said, it should be a disciplinary offense.
Are you saying a silly thing can be serious? Serious being the antonym of trivial?...Anyway, I should have backed out, soooo...I was simply giving you the chance to back away.
I can provide you at least a half-dozen dictionary definitions of "silly" from as many dictionaries as needed, none of them requiring the thing to be trivial. One such definition would make my point, but to make this more interesting, can you provide a single commonly accepted definition to back up the claim that silly things have to be trivial?
One planet under GodOn Planet X we spell it criminalized.
Are you saying a silly thing can be serious? Serious being the antonym of trivial?...Anyway, I should have backed out, soooo...
Should it be illegal for secondary school tutors to teach that evolution is not a fact?
I'd say it's not the kind of thing we make laws about; this is a problem that is best handled by school administration. If a teacher is incompetent or unwilling to teach the subject, they should lose their job - but it shouldn't be illegal to be bad at something.
On the other hand, there's nothing to be done about private tutors, as people do have the right to teach their children lies, as long as they do not significantly harm said children.
It's that grey (oops, sorry, gray) area between what denotes a school to be public. Here in the UK there are now freeschools which can teach whatever they like it would seem, even though they are funded by the state.
"They're our children so we should be free to 'teach' them whatever we like" being the argument which doesn't get shot down. I'd really like to see government observers in those 'controversial' biology lessons, but at the moment there seems no legal framework for that.
Really? Do you mean children schooled in these institutions don't have to take national exams to show that they are learning everything they need to? That's the way it works in here, as well as many other countries.
I think there are still exams in the UK. There's a difference between giving the correct answer and sharing the view of the teacher evolution is nonsense. Parroting something held to be untrue score marks is probably quite common about this.