Brain Change
Challenge conventional wisdom.
Destroy dogma, superstition, and lies.
Spare thoughts, anyone?


Thursday, December 11, 2008

 

Midwestern Knuckle-Draggers


I live in an intellectual backwater. It's called Kentucky. I love the people and the beautifully rolling hills. It's a wonderful place. But lately my state has become the laughingstock of the world.

We have been cursed with a monument to stupidity in the guise of a museum--the Creation Museum.

As of December 2008, however, I can laugh back at my knuckle-dragging neighbors in Ohio. The Cincinnati Zoo tried to team up with Kentucky's mockery of a museum in a absurd co-promotion called hyped as "Two Great Attractions, One Great Deal." Embarrassed by the backlash, the Zoo cancelled the promotion before it brought in any purchases to refund.

Here's what the the Creation Museum's founder, Ken Hamm, had to say about the bum's rush his museum received:

"It's a pity that intolerant people have pushed for our expulsion simply because of our Christian faith. Some of their comments... reveal great intolerance for anything having to do with Christianity."

Here's what really goes down:

People who respect science raised a fuss, not because of your Christian faith, Hamm. They object to your calling Creationism science and the chapel you've dedicated to your creation myth a museum. You've tried to elevate your belief system behind a mask of science. That's what's objectionable.

I tolerate Christianity. However, I find Christianity dressed up in cheap and flashy costume meant to look like science absurdly objectionable.

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Comments:
It is astounding to me that the Scopes trial is STILL going on, despite the progress of science in so many other areas. Why is this one area of science the one creationists choose to challenge with superstition?
 
Dave,

The Origin of Species contradicts the hands-on involvement of God in creating individual species. For those who take the Bible literally, this is a big no-no. In their defense of literal interpretation, some have exaggerated the threat of Darwin to say his theories deny the existence of God.

While the Natural Selection mechanism does not deny God, it pretty much makes species-by-species creation unnecessary. It also adds millions of years to the creation calendar.

Also I think Evolution, though it doesn't deny the existence of God, cuts to the heart of the argument for her. She's not necessary. But if you choose to believe that God set Evolution in motion, you're still good. In fact, were I a believer, I'd have much more awe and respect for a god who set Evolution in motion as opposed to someone who made bugs, bears, and babes out of clay.
 

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