[b]Radio wrote:[/b] [quote]Creationism needs to stay where it is now: in church. Although i don't believe in the full theory, Evolution is not a biased source. It does not involve God while at the same time not excluding the idea of God. Creationism however, is a biased approach made by theists, specifically Christians. And yes, Atheists do exist. Not to mention, if you taught Creationism, you'd have to teach every religious aspect and point of view that comes with it. Including Islam, Paganism, Satanism, Scientology, even Jedism. Even though your child might be learning something you disagree with, tell them why it's against your beliefs, and let them decide for themselves which is right. Pushing Creationism into Public Schools as a form of Science is like banning Harry Potter books...[/quote] See that one point is exactly what I think - Teach it to the kids, and let them know that there is some debate. Soooo... what's the problem with teaching them about multiple worldviews? I learned the 5 tenets of Islam in public schools. Why should I be banned from learning the 10 commandments in the same school? Vincent- Yeah, it's more plausible, and less of a leap of faith. The title alone tells me it's biased, because modern evolutionists ADMIT that Darwin WAS indeed wrong, on several points. They simply take the remaining darwinist theory to create modern evolution (evolutionary origin) theory.