Katha Pollitt: What's the Matter With Creationism?
Do you know what the worst thing about the recent Gallup poll on
evolution is? It isn’t that 46 percent of respondents are creationists
(“God created human beings pretty much in their present form at one time
within the last ten thousand years or so”). Or that 32 percent believe
in “theistic evolution” (“Human beings have developed over millions of
years from less advanced forms of life, but God guided this process”).
Or that only 15 percent said humans evolved and “God had no part in this
process.” It isn’t even that the percentage of Americans with
creationist views has barely budged since 1982, when it was 44 percent,
with a small rise in the no-God vote (up from 9 percent) coming at the
expense of the divine-help position (down from 38 percent). Or that 58
percent of Republicans are creationists, although that does explain a
lot.
It’s that the proportion of college graduates who are creationists is
exactly the same as for the general public. That’s right: 46 percent of
Americans with sixteen long years of education under their belt believe
the story of Adam and Eve is literally true. Even 25 percent of
Americans with graduate degrees believe dinosaurs and humans romped
together before Noah’s flood. Needless to say, this remarkable
demonstration of educational failure attracts little attention from
those who call for improving our schools.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
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