I feel that evolution in school must have an alternate view due to the significant ramifications it implies upon our children.
How about an alternate view due to the facts?
Currently we teach out children that they evolved through some scientific process and therefor their lives just "happened". No divine insight, no importance to their creation, no hope, just a simple occurrence that evolved through millions of years.
You seem to think that a science classroom is the appropriate forum for offering "divine insight," "importance to their creation," and "hope."
I should remind you that we also teach our children that should they fall out of a 30-story building, gravity will just "happen" to accelerate them at a rate of 32 feet/second/second. No divine protection, no importance to their preservation, no hope, just a simple stain on the sidewalk 300 feet below.
That can have some significant ramifications upon our children... where's the alternate view to that?
Why can't teachers discuss the flaws concerning Darwin's "theory"? Nowhere are public schools given any latitude to even discuss any debate on this.
Which flaws might those be?
Why? If the scientific community is so assured that their assumptions are full proof, then they should be open to debate.
You were given the oppertunity to debate in a court of law... both sides were heard, and ID came up laughably short. How would the classroom be any different?
Remember that before Darwin was accepted, the only acceptable scientific theory was creationism, read your history folks, creationism was taught as science at one time!
So was alchemy and astrology. Furthermore,
at one time, slavery was taught as an acceptable moral practice, heresy was a capital offense, and an interracial relationship most commonly ended in a lynching.
At one time, people engaged in activities which are now considered absurd, obsolete, and/or barbaric. As a former member of a school board, your responsibility was to lead children forwards, not back.
Apparantly the voters felt the same way.
And the Scopes Trial of 1925 was a defeat initially for Darwinism.
How so? The issue was never whether or not evolutionary theory and/or Darwinism was actually true... although many people, then and now, wanted it to be the issue.
The issue was a simple question of law: Did John T. Scopes violate the Butler Act? Of course he did! That was the whole point of his action! Scopes was practically recruited by the ACLU to break this law, so that it would attract public attention. His guilt was a foregone conclusion... his conviction a slam-dunk.
For all the intelligent people out there that want to profess their expertise and professed intellectual superiority, I find it hard to believe that they believe their inception into this world was due to cosmic dust, millions of years of evolution and natural selection.
Well, you are entitled to your beliefs... nobody's denying you that.