Sorry no full quote, the copyright actually says no redistribution (and strangely I try not to break copyright in public forums).
I'm frankly surprised a politician asked such an intelligent question.
Some lawmakers struggled to understand the concept.
"I've always viewed evolution as sort of the ultimate design. It would change and adapt and accommodate to whatever the situation was," said Rep. P. Michael Sturla. "When did the intelligent design occur, in your theory?"
This reminds me of something Carl Sagan wrote in one of his books;that most of the religious types who bugged him about the Big Bang and evolution vrs creationism seemed to want God to be small and simple.
Big Bang : Big
Evolution : Big and complex "the ultimate design"
5000 year old earth : Small
People made from clay/dust : Simple
Evolution,the Big Bang and multibillion year time scales seem to freak these people out.
Sagan also pointed out that a God who could just start a universe and have it unfold to high complexity on its own is more impressive that a little god who has to do everything himself,by hand.
Personally,I'm with Sturla on this one.ID is just a copout - neither honestly religious nor scientific.
Sorry no full quote, the copyright actually says no redistribution (and strangely I try not to break copyright in public forums).
I'm frankly surprised a politician asked such an intelligent question.
Some lawmakers struggled to understand the concept.
"I've always viewed evolution as sort of the ultimate design. It would change and adapt and accommodate to whatever the situation was," said Rep. P. Michael Sturla. "When did the intelligent design occur, in your theory?"
Behe had no answer.
It is only polite that you quote the original text. If you can e-mail the original article to your friends and co-workers, then you can damned well post the text of it to a BBS. We're not making any money off it, and you've linked the article and you're not claiming it as your own, so you've not "broken" the copyright. (And I've seen CNN articles posted here before.)
CNN wrote:
Bill would allow 'intelligent design' in Pennsylvania schools
Tuesday, June 21, 2005; Posted: 10:13 a.m. EDT (14:13 GMT)
HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Experts on both sides of the debate over whether public schools should teach "intelligent design" as an alternative to evolution -- a question already before a federal court -- sparred in front of a state legislative panel in Pennsylvania.
The House Subcommittee on Basic Education heard testimony Monday on a bill that would allow local school boards to mandate that science lessons include intelligent design, a concept that holds the universe must have been created by an unspecified guiding force because it is so complex.
The legislation is sponsored by only a dozen lawmakers, and its prospects of passing the General Assembly are unclear as lawmakers try to meet a June 30 state budget deadline.
But a federal judge will consider the issue this fall, when a lawsuit against the Dover Area School District is scheduled to go to trial. The suit alleges that the school board violated the constitutional separation of church and state when it voted in October to require ninth-grade students to hear about intelligent design during biology class.
Michael J. Behe, a biological sciences professor at Lehigh University, told the subcommittee that intelligent design has no religious underpinnings. Critics argue that it is a variation of creationism, the biblical-based view that regards God as the creator of life.
Behe said intelligent design merely contends that evidence of complex physical structures shows that design, rather than evolution, is responsible for an organism or cell.
Some lawmakers struggled to understand the concept.
"I've always viewed evolution as sort of the ultimate design. It would change and adapt and accommodate to whatever the situation was," said Rep. P. Michael Sturla. "When did the intelligent design occur, in your theory?"
Behe had no answer.
"Questions like, 'When did the designing take place?' ... are all good questions. We'd love to have answers for them, but they are separate questions from the question, 'Was this designed in the first place?"' Behe said.
The American Civil Liberties Union, one of the groups that filed the federal lawsuit, contends that allowing intelligent design to be taught would undermine the state's science standards, which specify the teaching of evolution.
"How many new biotechnology companies will want to locate here in Pennsylvania if our students are being taught a watered-down version of the complexities of evolution?" asked Larry Frankel, legislative director for the state's ACLU chapter.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:It is only polite that you quote the original text. If you can e-mail the original article to your friends and co-workers, then you can damned well post the text of it to a BBS. We're not making any money off it, and you've linked the article and you're not claiming it as your own, so you've not "broken" the copyright. (And I've seen CNN articles posted here before.)
My apologies. I didn't want to get anyone into any kind of legal troubles by some litigation happy company. In the future I'll quote the whole article.
But yes, on-topic, I'm surprised (and pleased) that the PA legislature is as critical of this piece of legislation as they seem to be, insofar as PA is comprised mainly of Philadelphia and rural Jesusland. The article mentions that the bill has limited sponsorship, and its future, at the moment, doesn't seem all that bright.
I find it quite funny that one of the head muckety-mucks of ID is flat-out admitting that he's full of shit.
"Well, we don't know when the designing happened. Or how it happened. Or who did it. Come on, just trust us on this one! We're good for it! In conclusion, teach ID in public schools."
"There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance--that principle is contempt prior to investigation." -Herbert Spencer
"Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain." - Schiller, Die Jungfrau von Orleans, III vi.
GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:But yes, on-topic, I'm surprised (and pleased) that the PA legislature is as critical of this piece of legislation as they seem to be, insofar as PA is comprised mainly of Philadelphia and rural Jesusland. The article mentions that the bill has limited sponsorship, and its future, at the moment, doesn't seem all that bright.
Even if it passed, Fat Eddie would laugh it right out of the governor's office.
Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963 X-Ray Blues