by Glenn Branch
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Not so long ago in Birmingham,
England, it was a reggae
version of the Origin of Species with a video to match, but
soon in San Diego, they’ll be listening to the Galápagos
Mountain Boys playing their own brand of scientific bluegrass. In Oslo,
Norway, they’ll be attending a series
of scholarly lectures on the evolution of language, while they’ll be throwing
another shrimp on the barbie
by way of celebration in Melbourne, Australia. In Terre Haute,
Indiana; Penn Museum.
In Seattle, a Darwin impersonation contest
is part of the festivities, while across the Puget Sound in Bremerton, it’s a
one-man show
with Darwin live and in concert. To
top it all, in Whitewater, Wisconsin, the reception is going to feature
what’s billed as the world’s largest edible tree of life.
Yes, Darwin Day is back, and
still going strong. February 12, 2008, is the 199th anniversary of the birth of
Charles Darwin, and colleges and universities, schools, libraries, museums,
churches, civic groups, and just plain folks across the country—and the
world—are preparing to celebrate Darwin Day, on or around February 12, in honor
of the life and work of Charles Darwin. Last year, over 850 such events took
place worldwide, and 2008—just one year shy of the Darwin bicentennial—is
shaping up to be just as abundant in celebration. Darwin Day provides a
marvelous opportunity not only to celebrate Darwin’s birthday but also to
enjoy, and engage in, public outreach about science, evolution, and the
importance of evolution education. The Darwin Day Celebration website,
administered by the Institute of Humanist Studies, maintains a useful registry
where you can find
a Darwin Day event near you and spread the word
about your own.
Accompanying Darwin Day is Evolution Weekend, February 8–10 in
2008, sponsored by the Clergy Letter
Project, which encompasses over 11,000 members of the clergy who have
signed a statement
on science and religion describing evolution as “a foundational scientific
truth, one that has stood up to rigorous scrutiny and upon which much of human
knowledge and achievement rests” and calling for education policymakers “to
preserve the integrity of the science curriculum by affirming the teaching of
the theory of evolution as a core component of human knowledge.” Evolution
Weekend is a perfect time for interested congregations to discuss and reflect
on the relationship between religion and science. As Michael Zimmerman, the
initiator of the project, recently wrote
in the Houston Chronicle, “With more than 740 congregations representing
all 50 states and nine countries planning to participate, the landscape’s
changing for the better. Clergy will be delivering sermons, leading discussions
and hosting speakers, and parishioners will be able to engage in meaningful
discourse.”
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Why make such a point of
celebrating Darwin Day, as opposed to, say, Einstein Day on March 14? A crucial
reason, particularly in the United States, is to counteract the public climate
of ignorance of, skepticism about, and hostility toward evolution. In Florida,
for example, the state board of education is soon to consider a proposed new
set of state science standards—which, unlike their predecessors,
manage actually to use the e-word, “evolution,” in describing what students in
Florida’s public schools need to know about biology. Dismayingly, however, no
fewer than ten county school boards have adopted resolutions calling for
evolution to be taught as “a theory, not a fact” (for the wretched details,
consult Florida Citizens for
Science). Evidently the fact that the country’s scientific
experts—most recently the National Academy of Sciences, in its new
publication Science, Evolution, and
Creationism—and educational
authorities have consistently supported teaching evolution is also lost on
them.
Such uninformed and misguided
opposition to teaching evolution isn’t confined to Florida, either: consider recent
events in Texas,
where the director of science curriculum at the state education agency was
forced to resign after forwarding a brief e-mail announcing a lecture by a
critic of creationism, or South Carolina,
where only a massive outcry from scientists and educators prevented the state
board of education from rejecting a standard high school biology textbook
opposed by local creationists, or in any of the three states where
antievolution legislation was considered in 2007. (None so far in 2008, but the
year is young.) So that’s a fine reason for you to devote a day—at the museum
or in a pew, at a lecture hall or in a movie theater, out in the park or
indoors on a badminton court—to learn about, discuss, and celebrate Darwin and
his contributions to science, and to demonstrate your support of teaching
evolution in the public schools.
Glenn Branch is deputy director
of the National Center for Science Education,
a non-profit organization that defends the teaching of evolution in the public
schools. With NCSE’s executive director Eugenie C. Scott, he edited Not in Our Classrooms:
Why Intelligent Design is Wrong for Our Schools (Beacon Press, 2006).
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