"A new poll released just in time for Charles Darwin's 200th birthday found only 39 percent of Americans say they "believe in the theory of evolution" and just 24 percent of those who attend church weekly believe in the explanation for the origin of life."http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,491345,00.htmlI figured there would be much more but I guess the 36 percent that say they don't have an opinion either way makes sense.
The theory of evolution only demands one thing: be strong, be competitive, pass on your traits to your offspring, evolve your species.
Quote from: QwazyWabbit on April 07, 2009, 08:34:21 PMThe theory of evolution only demands one thing: be strong, be competitive, pass on your traits to your offspring, evolve your species.I count 4 things there.Also, if one must make a conscious decision to "evolve their species", then I guess evolution wouldn't be as much of an inherent truth as an applied science. There's that nasty word "theory" again. It isn't absolute truth at this point. It's like getting a nice alcohol swab before they hook you up to the lethal injection IV.
... I have a suspicion that in the not too distant future, humans will figure out how to replicate and manipulate the DNA of all organisms to where we will be able to create brand new hybrids of existing organisms. ...
God set it all up to operate under certain rules, pronounced it all Good, packed up his tools and went home.See Mark Twain, "Letters from the Earth" edited by Bernard DeVoto.
Quote from: |iR|Focalor on April 10, 2009, 02:19:04 PM... I have a suspicion that in the not too distant future, humans will figure out how to replicate and manipulate the DNA of all organisms to where we will be able to create brand new hybrids of existing organisms. ...Saw Craig Venter at the Origins conference where he briefed his team's ability to:sequence DNA from an organism (in other words read it from an organism and store it's representation in a computer)modify the DNA sequence (in the computer)write it back and boot a cell with the new DNA (using a process which takes the place of the previous DNA, thus when the cell replicates it, it replicates the new DNASo, already done!
Of course humans have been effectively modifying DNA indirectly through selective breeding anyway.
other countries numbers would be FAR more scale tipping in the direction of religion humping then the US...
U.S. one of the most religious countriesFunded by a variety of public and private sources, including the National Science Foundation, the series of representative national surveys now contains data from nearly 250,000 respondents around the world. [...]