Magi

Contact info
Word
Research
   Publications
Studies
Free Software
Hobbies
Articles
Photography
About me
   Curriculum Vitae

©Marko Grönroos, 1998

USENET News sfnet.keskustelu.uskonnottomuus

Säie: Court Refuses Evolution Disclaimer

Edellinen säie: Brianin elämää
Seuraava säie: Uskonnottomuus rauha.
[Muut säikeet] [Muut uutisryhmät]
Newsgroups: sfnet.keskustelu.uskonnottomuus,sfnet.keskustelu.evoluutio
Subject: Court Refuses Evolution Disclaimer
From: magi AT iki PISTE fi (Marko Grönroos)
Date: 19 Jun 2000 20:23:17 +0300


WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court refused to let a public school
district require that the teaching of evolution be accompanied by a
disclaimer mentioning "the biblical version of creation" and other
teachings on life's origin.

The justices, by a 6-3 vote Monday, let stand rulings that struck down
a Louisiana school board's disclaimer policy as a violation of the
constitutionally required separation of government and religion.

Monday's action was not a precedent-setting decision but only a denial
of review.

Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and
Clarence Thomas voted to hear arguments in the case.

The Tangipahoa Parish school board in 1994 voted to require teachers
to tell students about to study the theory of evolution that is
"presented to inform students of the scientific concept and not
intended to influence or dissuade the biblical version of creation or
any other concept."

The disclaimer drafted by the school board also said: "It is the basic
right and privilege of each student to form his-her own opinion or
maintain beliefs taught by parents on this very important
matter. ... Students are urged to exercise critical thinking and
gather all information possible and closely examine each alternative
toward forming an opinion."

Three parents of students sued in federal court to challenge the
policy, and a federal judge blocked its enforcement. The judge said
the disclaimer was unconstitutional because it had a religious
purpose.

A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed
that the disclaimer had to be struck down but cited a different reason
- it had the effect of promoting religion.

The panel did not rule out the possibility that a school board could
require some type of disclaimer stating that evolution was not the
only accepted explanation of the origin of life. But it said the
Tangipahoa Parish disclaimer "under the facts and circumstances of
this case ... is not sufficiently neutral" to be constitutionally
permissible.

In the appeal acted on Monday, lawyers for the school board argued
that "the mere mention of the biblical version of creation by way of
illustration does not present a significant risk of perceived
endorsement of Bible-based religion."

The appeal said reasonable high school or elementary students would
not interpret the disclaimer as a pro-religion message.

"The central message of the disclaimer resolution is that there are no
outsiders or insiders, no one who is favored or disfavored, on the
issue of life's origin but persons of all viewpoints are full members
in the school community."

Lawyers for those who challenged the disclaimer disagreed. "By
disclaiming only evolution - the one element of the school curriculum
that generates religious controversy - the school board has violated
both the constitutional mandate of neutrality toward religion and its
obligation to provide its students with secular educations free from
religious indoctrination or partisanship," they said.

They noted that the disclaimer was drafted shortly after the school
board voted 5-4 to reject a proposal to teach "creation-science" in
the district's schools.

Creation-science teaches that Earth and most life forms came into
existence suddenly about 6,000 years ago. Critics have attacked it as
a disguise for a literal translation of the Book of Genesis.

Evolution, first propounded by Charles Darwin, states that Earth is
billions of years old, and that life forms developed gradually several
million years ago.

The Supreme Court in 1987 barred states from requiring the teaching of
creationism in public schools where evolution is taught, calling such
a Louisiana law a thinly veiled attempt to promote religion.

The teaching of evolution has been controversial since the famous 1925
"monkey law" trial in which teacher John Scopes was convicted and
fined $100 for teaching evolution when Tennessee law made it a crime
to teach anything but the Biblical version of creation.

Scopes' conviction later was overturned by the Tennessee Supreme Court
on a procedural matter, and never reached the nation's highest court.

The case is Tangipahoa Parish Board of Education vs. Freiler, 99-1625.

Writing for the court's three dissenters Monday, Scalia criticized the
court for standing by while an appeals court "bars a school district
from even suggesting to students that other theories besides evolution
- including but not limited to, the biblical theory of creation - are
worthy of their consideration."

--
-- Marko Grönroos, magi AT iki PISTE fi (http://www.iki.fi/magi/)
-- Paradoxes are the source of truth and the end of wisdom

Edellinen säie: Brianin elämää
Seuraava säie: Uskonnottomuus rauha.
[Muut säikeet] [Muut uutisryhmät]