Posted by
ERIKM on Wednesday, October 01, 2008 9:36:54 PM
It is not a violation of separation
of church and state to teach intelligent design in classrooms. Precedent and
research demonstrates that in teaching intelligent design (ID) we have a duty
to explore, or possibly mandate, which materials are allowed to be taught and
what conclusions can be made within the context of the classroom. To be clear,
intelligent design is not creationism. Creationism carries the premise that a
divine creator acted and created the universe. By comparison, ID does not
identify any creator but merely seeks to offer explanation and theory to the
origin of complex life forms just as Darwinism or evolution does. ID is theory that can be researched, discussed,
and tested in light of current evidence. I argue that if the particular
organization or school teaching ID has a purely secular reason and the
curriculum proves education for the students then it is within the law. In my argument
I would like to cite two US court cases, Lemon v. Kurtzman and Edwards v. Aguillard.
Lemon v. Kurtzman is the classic Supreme Court ruling that many ID advocates and
opponents refer to in critiquing any program that seeks to establish the
teaching of ID in schools. When the court reached its decision in 1971 the “Lemon
Test” was incepted in American jurisprudence. The Lemon test is regulatory
clause that can be used to test the validity of any legislation supporting ID
curriculum. The Lemon test consists of three mandates:
- The government's action must have a
secular legislative purpose;
- The government's action must not
have the primary effect of either advancing or inhibiting religion;
- The government's action must not
result in an "excessive government entanglement" with religion.
These guidelines can be used to
support legislation that allows for a curriculum to be compiled that draws no
religious or spiritual conclusion, is not affiliated with any religious group,
and enhances the education of a body of students. In an article written by
Jonah Avriel Cohen, a supporter of
evolutionary theory, titled ‘Why Intelligent design theory ought to
be taught’ (http://www.americanthinker.com/2005/08/why_intelligent_design_theory.html)
he writes: “Fact: The theory of
intelligent design goes back at least as far as classical Greece and it has
been debated in nearly every century since then. Our century is no
different. Those who advocate intelligent design are not 'disguising' anything;
they are not furtive men. They are offering for your consideration an idea that
has intrigued the minds of everyone from Plato to Kant, an idea that possibly
began when Socrates asked: 'With such signs of forethought in the design of
living creatures, can you doubt they are the work of choice or design?'
Regarding the argument that ID is creationism in disguise, as some assert,
Jonah replies: “Now, because the design argument can be found in Plato's
dialogues, we can deduce that the theory not only predates the theory of
creationism — which was but one religious response to Darwin's On the
Origin of Species (1859) — it is also not wedded to Judeo—Christian
scripture.
Edwards v. Aguillard was a case that appeared before the Supreme Court in 1987. This case
ruled that those teaching creationism that advanced religious thought
was unconstitutional. According to the
researchers at Ideacenter.org this trial provides the “framework under
which a legislature might pass an acceptable bill regarding the teaching of
science” (http://www.ideacenter.org/contentmgr/showdetails.php/id/1184). The case concluded “If the Louisiana
Legislature's purpose was solely to
maximize the comprehensiveness and effectiveness of science instruction, it
would have encouraged the teaching of all scientific theories about the origins
of humankind. (Edwards at 588) (Emphasis mine). Therefore, teaching the
theory of intelligent design is not pushing religion on our children, it is
actually bringing them up to date with history’s greatest questions and research
that has created some of the greatest minds ever known. To say that intelligent
design violates separation of church and state is equivalent to saying that
teaching evolution is hateful rhetoric that is offensive to those people of
faith. It is not; it is theory based on science and research, nothing less.
For further research:
Foundation
for thought and ethics- http://www.fteonline.com/
Intelligent
Design and Evolution Awareness Center- www.ideacenter.org
Intelligent
Design Network- www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org