
Origins 4(1):46-49 (1977).
NEWS AND COMMENTS
Controversy has arisen in several states over the use of a
high-school biology textbook, Biology: A Search for Order in Complexity, prepared
by the Creation Research Society (CRS) and published by Zondervan Publishing House in
1974.
In Texas there has been more publicity than action. The Dallas public
school board voted 6 to 3 to adopt the text as a supplementary source book. Evolutionists
and liberal clergymen threatened to take legal action in order to reverse the board's
decision and prevent the teaching of creationism in the public schools. Because much
publicity over the textbook adoption was generated by the news media, "Americans
United for Separation of Church and State" arranged a formal panel debate on creation
and evolution in order to present both sides of the question of origins to the public. The
presentation took place at the Dallas Public Library and was televised on February 24,
1977.
In Indiana the battle has been much more involved. After the state's
textbook commission included the CRS book among its list of state-approved texts in 1975
(and reaffirmed the decision in March 1977), the West Clark and South Ripley school
districts adopted it as their sole text, while the remaining five districts used it in
conjunction with other textbooks.
In Clark County the parents of two students appealed to the Indiana
Civil Liberties Union (ICLU). They argued that the text promoted the Biblical theory of
creation in such statements as: "a primary purpose of science should be to learn
about God's handiwork," "there is no way to support the doctrine of
evolution," and "the most reasonable explanation for the actual facts of biology
as they are known scientifically is that of biblical creationism." While defenders of
the text such as West Clark School District Superintendent Herman Miller insisted that it
presented more than just the Biblical account of origins, critics labeled it as
"antiscience" and an attempt to promote fundamentalist religious ideas in the
public-school classrooms.
After studying the book, its teacher's manual, and publisher's
correspondence, Marion County Superior Court Judge Michael T. Dugan announced in
Indianapolis, on April 14, 1977, that the use of the CRS text, which he considered to be
clearly one-sided, violated the state statutes, the Indiana constitution, and the U.S.
constitutional provisions of separation of church and state. He then ordered the textbook
commission to remove the textbook from the state-approved list. In his ruling, Judge Dugan
stated: "Throughout the text, while both viewpoints are mentioned, Biblical
creationism is consistently presented as the only correct 'scientific' view. Two entire
chapters, in fact, are devoted to lengthy discussions of the fallacies and weaknesses of
the evolution viewpoint. On the other hand, there are no chapters or passages in the text
which deal critically with Biblical creationism."
Judge Dugan declined to comment as to the validity of either evolution
or creationism, saying that the "question is whether a text obviously designed to
present only the view of Biblical creationism in a favorable light is constitutionally
acceptable in the public schools of Indiana. Two hundred years of constitutional
government demand that the answer be no." He added: "The prospect of biology
teachers and students alike forced to answer and respond to continued demand for correct
fundamentalist Christian doctrines has no place in the public schools."
While controversies have arisen over the CRS textbook in the states of
California, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Texas, the Indiana case was the first to reach the
courts. ICLU attorney Irving L. Fink predicted that Judge Dugan's decision would have
"tremendous impact around the country" and commented that the commission
"didn't have the guts to change their position" even though their original
adoption of the CRS text had been a mistake.
Superintendent Miller remarked that the West Clark School System would
continue to use the banned text, because "as far as we're concerned, it is a legal
book until the textbook commission tells us it is not. If we have to change, it's going to
cost a lot of money." State Superintendent of Schools Harold M. Negley, who is also
chairman of the commission, stated that a decision on an appeal of Dugan's ruling would be
made after the commission and state's, attorney general examined the ruling and that the
CRS book would remain in use at least until the commission's next meeting which would be
scheduled later.
Legal actions and court decisions are not the only means by which
evolutionists and other opponents of the teaching of creationism continue to battle.
Apparently believing the "scientific community" to be threatened by the teaching
of creation in the public-school classrooms, the American Humanist Association (AHA), led
by its president, Bette Chambers, issued an attack in the January/February 1977 issue of The
Humanist, a journal sponsored by the AHA and the American Ethical Union. (Effective
with the November/December 1977 issue, the latter group will no longer sponsor the
journal.)
The issue opened with a statement affirming evolution as a principle of
science. Signed by over 160 prominent scientists, educators and religious leaders, the
statement declared that evolution is firmly established in the view of the modern
scientific community and is "the only view that should be expounded in public-school
courses on science, which are distinct from those on religion."
The statement was sent to the major school districts in the United
States with a plea for "all local school boards, manufacturers of textbooks and
teaching materials, elementary and secondary teachers of biological science, concerned
citizens, and educational agencies" to oppose measures before state legislatures that
require equal treatment and emphasis of creation in the science classes and texts of
public schools. The statement also urged supporters of evolution to reject the concept
that evolution is a tenet of the religion of secular humanism and to support those who
present the matter of evolution fairly in the classrooms.
The Humanist then proceeded to print articles supporting the
statement. Preston Cloud, a biogeologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, led off the
attack by calling scientific creationism "the new inquisition." He warned that
"although the creationists may be irrational, they are not to be dismissed as a
lunatic fringe that can best be treated by being ignored. In California, which accounts
for about 10 percent of the public-school enrollment and thus exerts great leverage on
textbook publishers, they have proven themselves to be skillful tacticians, good
organizers, and uncompromising adversaries." Although Cloud's article was intended to
produce evidence for evolution, most of his remarks were confined to derogatory statements
about the damage that creationism was doing to the progress of science.
William V. Mayer, director of Biological Sciences Curriculum Study,
gave a history of evolutionary theory, attempting to establish the concept's nobility by
virtue of its longevity. Thus according to him, even the earliest written records of
mankind anticipated the elements of the modern theory of evolution. Charles Darwin was
praised for developing concepts of selection that explained the "how" of the
evolutionary process. Mayer then lauded the increasing wealth of data supporting evolution
and predicted that the future would show even more evidence until the anti-evolutionists
would "occupy the same place as do members of the Flat Earth Society in these days of
interplanetary exploration." He also stated that "evolution has become so
pervasive that to inveigh against it is similar to King Canute requesting the retreat of
the tide."
Bette Chambers summarized the section by explaining reasons for the
statement on evolution: "Since the public is led to believe, thanks to creationist
clamor so characteristic of this century, that an open choice between these two
alternatives exists within the science itself, it becomes imperative to state that this
view is rubbish, lest science education in America become the laughing stock of the
civilized world."
When Science News included a brief news item on the evolution
statement, reactions as indicated by the "letters" column during the following
weeks ranged the extremes from praise to criticism. Some also attempted to find common
ground between creation and evolution by suggesting forms of theistic evolution. In the
May/June 1977 issue of The Humanist, eight of the twelve letters criticized the
AHA for dogmatic, narrow-minded intolerance of other views. If the letters could be used
as indicators of public opinion, then the myth of the unified scientific community is
disproved, and it is not correct to say that all evolutionists are opposed to the teaching
of creation theory in science classes. It is doubtful that the statement affirming
evolution as a principle of science served to change anyone's views, and it will not
intimidate creationists into ceasing their efforts to have creation presented in the
public-school classrooms as an alternative theory to evolution.
All contents copyright
Geoscience Research Institute. All rights reserved.
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