Ken Ham believes in Dragons...

A mythology class or a world religions class would be just fine. That **** is fascinating, but it doesn't belong in science classes.

The thing is if you taught creationism and intelligent design, you'd have to teach about every religion and culture's idea of how the world began to be objective.

No you wouldn't. But why expect secular-statist schools to teach that there are other presuppositions out there other than their own? Wouldn't want to do that.
 
No you wouldn't. But why expect secular-statist schools to teach that there are other presuppositions out there other than their own? Wouldn't want to do that.

Evolution is not a presupposition, and I think you know that.
 
Two fundamentalists were on stage. Only one knew it.

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Only one sounds like a fundamentalist.
 
Creation myths are fascinating and tell us a lot about the people that "created" them (The myth of the myth. LOL), but they have a shelf life. 2500 years seems long beyond the expiration date to me.
 
No you wouldn't. But why expect secular-statist schools to teach that there are other presuppositions out there other than their own? Wouldn't want to do that.

they can't teach it in science because it isn't science.
 
That's convenient. Just write it off by definition. Life is easy for you isn't it?

Hakuna Matata mother ****er.

Is there a scientific theory of intelligent design? Is there recorded observations verifying the hypothesis that life has been created by an intelligent being? Has it been scrutinized by the scientific community?
 
Hakuna Matata mother ****er.

Is there a scientific theory of intelligent design? Is there recorded observations verifying the hypothesis that life has been created by an intelligent being? Has it been scrutinized by the scientific community?

Better wash that mouth out with soap.

Is there a scientific theory of the origin of matter?
 
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