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02/08
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- Belief in Gravity (I mean evolution...)
- So easy a caveman could do it?
- Holophonics
- Breaking news: Crush on Olivia Judson continues
- Darwin, but no Lincoln?
- The iWish, aka the Pomegranate phone
- Dance, Dance, Evolution
- Moving on-- Modern Darwins
- Nano Nymphaeaceae
- Jive, n.
- Form and function-- will all cyborgs look this good?
- "Let us now kill Darwin"
- Palca on Darwin
- Innovation at NASA: what a joke?
- Ask and tell
- I've got the whole world in my hand
- If only it was actually ON the moon...
- Darwin Day
- Word games
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02/08
(19)
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Snark snark snark. Put that energy into education if it really bothers you. It's not as if you interact with people who don't believe in evolution.
ReplyDeleteFrom the original article:
ReplyDelete"IT IS 150 years since the publication of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, which suggested that all living things are related and that everything is ultimately descended from a single common ancestor. This has troubled many, including Darwin himself, as it subverted ideas of divine intervention. It is not surprising that the countries least accepting of evolution today tend to be the most devout. In the most recent international survey available, only Turkey is less accepting of the theory than America. Iceland and Denmark are Darwin's most ardent adherents. Indeed America has become only slightly more accepting of Darwin's theory in recent years. In 2008 14% of people polled by Gallup agreed that “man evolved over millions of years”, up from 9% in 1982."
http://www.economist.com/daily/chartgallery/displaystory.cfm?story_id=13062613&source=most_commented