Alright, I wasn't gonna post seriously in this thread, but...
From experience, it's just not true that most Christians accept evolution. And if they do, they usually accept it in a very general sorta way that totally ignores some very important scientific facts.
Gearmond wrote:people from either camps who debate creationism v. evolution are dumb.
catholic church has accepted it for fucking centuries (since the 1600's or so. evolution is older than you think) and any scientist worth their giblets will tell you that science can't go where creationism goes and therefore cannot disprove it.
as if science proves anything to begin with.
if you go "now wait just a minute there" you just THINK you know what science does, as opposed to what it actually does.
Creationism Vs Evolution is very important debate. Because of creationist I was legally denied a decent science education. When I learned what evolution really was, I was furious. And this is the case for millions of Christian school and homeschool kids around this country (and I'd assume it happens in Europe as well). I heard a lot of the "If we came from monkeys, then why are there still monkeys" shit. And if you don't think people denying evolution are common, you're not paying attention.
Science disproves lots of things. Like the belief that the earth is only 6000 years old. If you don't think science can disprove the creation story, then you don't know the creation story. The only reason it's not so rigidly based on the Bible all the time is because it's been disproved, and it's the losing side of the argument. It doesn't matter what the Catholic church says (they don't really take an official position), tons of people believe that, and they teach it to their children. In 2006, only 14% of adults were totally sold on the idea of evolution in the US. I'm sure that number is higher now, but it's still a lot lower than other western countries.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... ution.htmlAgain, just because everyone you know accepts evolution doesn't mean that's the way it works, and the denial of science is farther-reaching effects. It's directly tied to the "global warming is a hoax" and "Being gay is a choice" arguments that are so prevalent in this country. It's usually the same people making those arguments.
And I do realize that creationism and evolution aren't really theories of the same thing. Evolution has nothing to do with the beginning of the universe. But the standard, non-liberalized creationist view is direction at odds with generally understood science.
And, just to clarify-- if you have liberal view of creationism, where God kinda just set everything in motion billions of years ago, that's great. I have no problem with that. I just wish I could say that's the creationism I've seen.
*edit*
It turns out about half of Americans believe in Evolution, but all but 14% believe in theistic evolution. They don't seem to specify what "god-guided evolution" means, soooo...
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/200 ... 826-4947r/