Creationism should be taught in schools.
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 3 votes and with the same amount of points on both sides...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 3
- Time for argument
- Two days
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- Two weeks
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
Creationism refers to the belief that the universe and living organisms originate from specific acts of divine creation, as in the biblical account, rather than by natural processes such as evolution.
Kritiks are banned.
- Creationism "refers to the belief that the universe and living organisms originate from specific acts of divine creation, as in the biblical account, rather than by natural processes such as evolution" -Oxford Languages
- Taught: give information about or instruction in (a subject or skill).
- I believe creationism should be taught in schools, and in many ways it already is. I am willing to defend many of these cases.
- It is apparent that the biggest critique of creationism is that it is unscientific; or that it is religious or fictional in nature, and thus not aligned with reality as we perceive it.
- I won't be discussing whether creationism is true, false, justified, or not because I don't believe that is the most productive aspect of the debate.
- For all purposes, it is an essential part of history, religion, culture, and science, and by that metric, it has a place in any education system.
- Creationism should be taught in history because it is an important aspect of history. In history, we study change over time in every aspect of human society. Theories, overviews, and arguments are all significant parts of history and should all be taught.
- Creationism is a strong aspect of human society in theory, culture, and religion.
- Creationism has been the subject of many debates and legal cases such as Segraves v. the State of California, Freiler v. Tangipahoa Parish Board of Education, and Selman et al. v. Cobb County School District et al.
- This pertains to United States history and the study of various cases, the arguments behind them, and their significance.
- This relates to European history, the rise of naturalist theories, and the challenges to creationism that came with thinkers such as English biologist Charles Robert Darwin.
- Even if you believed creationism is false, (I won't claim either way) and therefore should not be taught, that still would not be a good argument.
- We are taught many theories such as Karl Marx's labor theory of value in economics which is demonstrably false.
- Because of this, it doesn't appear as if the falsehood or perceived falsehood of theories is what determines whether they are taught or not.
- According to a Boston university production called "the brink, "History provides strong evidence of how the environment around scientists was equally important in shaping their lives and discoveries."
- Creationism has a significant impact on the history and evolution of scientific thought. We have discussed that creationism should be taught in history, but we can also connect this to scientific thought.
- One of the most important aspects of science is science is its history.
- In astronomy and astrology, in studies of the solar system, students typically learn of the previous theories of the universe and the development that have come with them.
- Before the heliocentric model which placed the sun in the center of the solar system, was the geocentric model which placed the earth in the center.
- And I say if the geocentric theory is taught in schools as a part of scientific history then creationism which is also a significant part of our history in the interaction of scientific theories should be taught as well.
- Students are also taught the theory of spontaneous generation, defined by oxford languages as "the supposed production of living organisms from nonliving matter, as inferred from the apparent appearance of life in some supposedly sterile environments."
- As far as science instruction goes, we are many taught theories that have contributed to or preceded the development of what is more accepted and conventional.
- So far we have discussed the importance of the history of science because science itself studies and organizes knowledge. And therefore I say, creationism ought to be a part of that.
- "Religious studies, also known as the study of religion, is an academic field devoted to research into religious beliefs, behaviors, and institutions" (Wikipedia).
- I think there are very convincing arguments that creationism should be taught in religious studies. For one, it is both a core and fundamental teaching of many religions including Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Sikhism, Baháʼí Faith, and Mandaeism.
- One studying religious studies ought to be educated on the practices, beliefs, behaviors, and institutions, and creationism is a large part of those customs and beliefs.
- And I say, therefore, creationism is something that must be taught in schools, in religious studies, courses which are offered by almost every major university.
- One of the most discussed phenomenons in philosophy is the origin of the Universe. There are many aspects of philosophy that deal with this such as the philosophy of cosmology.
- "Cosmology deals with the physical situation that is the context in the large for human existence: the universe has such a nature that our life is possible. This means that although it is a physical science, it is of particular importance in terms of its implications for human life" (Plato Stanford).
- Creationism is also a theory and aspect of philosophy and in that regard, it should be taught in philosophy classes, as well as other philosophical theories and arguments are.
- Given this example, philosophy is a broad and complex subject and hopefully, we can get into more of an expansion in my later rounds.
- Ultimately creationism is an important part of philosophy and I hope my opening case will allow you to accept this.
- Although I am arguing affirmative in this debate, I am also the one defending the status quo, because creationism is taught in schools in all of these areas. The argument can be seen as, rather, this should be the case, and there are many needs for creationism in various instructions. CON should be able to sufficiently challenge the status quo and tell us why creationism should not be taught at all.
- please vote PRO and on to CON.
- Definition from google produced by oxford languages
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_studies
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creator_deity
- https://ncse.ngo/ten-major-court-cases-about-evolution-and-creationism
- https://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/Marxism.html
- https://www.bu.edu/articles/2016/science-history/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Darwin
- https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/cosmology/
- School: An institute for educating children
- Should: Used to indicate obligation, duty, or correctness, typically when criticizing someone's actions
Creationism, the belief that the universe and the various forms of life were created by God out of nothing (ex nihilo). It is a response primarily to modern evolutionary theory, which explains the diversity of life without recourse to the doctrine of God or any other divine power. It may also reject the big-bang model of the emergence of the universe. Mainstream scientists generally reject creationism. Today most creationists in the United States favour the elimination of evolution from the public school curriculum or at least the teaching of creationism alongside evolution as an equally legitimate scientific theory. [Britannica]
Creationists present themselves as the true bearers and present-day representatives of authentic, traditional Christianity, but historically speaking this is simply not true. It is not the case that the Bible taken literally has always had a major place in the lives or theology of Christians. For most, indeed, it has not. Natural religion – approaching God through reason and argument – has long had an honored place for both Catholics and Protestants... dating back to Saint Augustine around 400 AD, and even to earlier thinkers like Origen, have always recognized that at times the Bible needs to be taken metaphorically or allegorically. Thanks to a number of factors, Creationism started to grow dramatically in the early part of the twentieth century. There were the first systematic attempts to work out a position that would take account of modern science as well as just a literal reading of Genesis. There was the spread of public education, and more children being exposed to evolutionary ideas, bringing on a Creationist reaction. After the Scopes Trial, general agreement is that the Creationism movement had peaked and declined quite dramatically and quickly. Yet, it (and related anti-evolution activity) did have its lasting effects. [plato.stanford]
- Definition of school (disputed): any institution at which instruction is given in a particular discipline.
- Definition of should: agreed.
- Definition of creationism is binding (stated in the full description) so it cannot be contested.
- Definition of taught: give information about or instruction in (a subject or skill).
- Actually, not at all. This sort of logic just blatantly excludes schools that generally educate people who are adults, such as community colleges, trade schools, and universities. This is not how anyone defines the school. A school is simply an institution for the learning and education of anyone, not specifically children.
- Is a Univerity suddenly not a school?
- Is a College not a school now?
- The way con asserts that the use of the word "school" here is "unconventional" is a baseless assertion. Almost every reputable online dictionary or educational body will define school in the way I have. There is no justification for excluding a large proportion of schools for no apparent reason.
- Merriam Webster: "b: COLLEGE, UNIVERSITY"
- Collins Dictionary: "A university, college, or university department specializing in a particular type of subject can be referred to as a school."
- California Department of Education: The term "school" is used to refer to all educational institutions that have the following characteristics:
- Have one or more teachers to give instruction
- Have an assigned administrator
- Are based in one or more buildings
- Contain enrolled or prospectively enrolled students
- Vocabulay.com:
- 1. noun an educational institution
- 2. noun a building where young people receive education
- Even if I mentioned that creationism is already taught in schools, and even if I argue that I am defending the status quo, that is not moving the goalposts at all.
- According to Wikipedia: Moving the goalposts is an informal fallacy in which evidence presented in response to a specific claim is dismissed and some other (often greater) evidence is demanded.
- The resolution is that Creationism should be taught in schools. I am simply pointing out that it is already.
- That doesn't move the goalposts at all.
- There are many types of creationism, but they all encompass the idea that the "universe and living organisms originate from specific acts of divine creation."
- Maybe Christian Abrahamic creationism would have a historical significance in American/English history, but in religious studies, students can be educated on any aspect of creationism of any religion.
- There is no reason different forms of creationism can be taught in different countries' historical education.
- Ultimately, CON's point is a red herring. My examples generally correspond to Abrahamic religions, but that doesn't affect that creationism should be taught in schools.
- It doesn't matter if you believe something is a movement or not as we are discussing the ideas; we are debating whether or not creationism should be taught in schools or not. Your point is irrelevant.
- CON displays a severe misunderstanding of the Pope's stance on evolution. For one, the Pope accepts evolution thats true.
- But to say that he said creationism is false is wrong. The pope's and the catholic stance on this is that creationism and evolution aren't mutually exclusive. We can see what he really said here.
On October 27, 2014, Pope Francis issued a statement at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences that "Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the notion of creation," warning against thinking of God's act of creation as "God [being] a magician, with a magic wand able to do everything."The Pope also expressed in the same statement the view that scientific explanations such as the Big Bang and evolution in fact require God's creation:[God] created beings and allowed them to develop according to the internal laws that he gave to each one, so that they were able to develop and to arrive at their fullness of being. He gave autonomy to the beings of the universe at the same time at which he assured them of his continuous presence, giving being to every reality. And so creation continued for centuries and centuries, millennia and millennia, until it became what we know today, precisely because God is not a demiurge or a magician, but the creator who gives being to all things. ...The Big Bang, which nowadays is posited as the origin of the world, does not contradict the divine act of creating, but rather requires it. The evolution of nature does not contrast with the notion of creation, as evolution presupposes the creation of beings that evolve.[66]
- For one, this is not correct. The resolution never says that creationism will replace evolution. It just says that creationism should be taught to students.
- Secondly, creationism and evolution aren't mutually exclusive. As you yourself brought up, the Pope himself acknowledges evolution, but according to your own source "In 1950 Pope Pius XII released an encyclical confirming that there is no intrinsic conflict between the theory of evolution and the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church"
- Even proponents of creationism acknowledge that both can be explained without contradiction, and have done so for 70 years. One does not preclude the other.
- CON's case can be summarized on the following premises.
- PRO has moved the goalposts
- That creationism should not be taught as an alternative to evolution.
- Creationism is a movement of religious fundamentalists who reject science etc.
- a has been proven to be false, as asserting that the resolution pertains to the status quo does not alter the resolution itself.
- b has been proven irrelevant because there is nothing that creationism must preclude evolution. Rather both can complement each other, and both can be taught.
- c has been proven to be irrelevant because just because you believe something to be a more largely sinister movement, does not mean it is understood, taught, and accepted in this way.
- CON largely drops the various ways in which creationism can be taught in schools in areas of world history, religious studies, philosophy, and science/science history.
- He argues for a semantic distinction between "taught" and "taught about," but he does not even challenge the definition, or provide a reference definition, more so how it is used.
- Taught means "give(n) information about or instruction in (a subject or skill)"
- CON says "Teaching math is done with the intention of creating mathematicians," but this is hardly the case. Out of all people taught mathematics very few actually become mathematicians at higher levels of education. Like any instruction, teaching is to equip the student with knowledge.
- CON goes on to say that "Science is taught in schools so that the children can learn the truth about different aspects of our universe" but this lies directly in contrast to what CON just said, about the intention to create people of the same profession? So it appears the couplet is self-refuting.
- All things considered, CON has not sufficiently countered any of my arguments or made any of his own.
In 1982, in McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education. The Arkansas statute required public schools to give balanced treatment to "creation-science" and "evolution-science". In a decision that gave a detailed definition of the term "science", the court declared that "creation science" is not in fact a science. The court also found that the statute did not have a secular purpose, noting that the statute used language peculiar to creationist literature. The theory of evolution does not presuppose either the absence or the presence of a creator.The provision of a comprehensive science education is undermined when it is forbidden to teach evolution except when creation science is also taught.In 1990, in Webster v. New Lenox School District, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals found that a school district may prohibit a teacher from teaching creation science in fulfilling its responsibility to ensure that the First Amendment's establishment clause is not violated and that religious beliefs are not injected into the public school curriculum. [PRO's source]
Moving the goalpost: changing the rules in a situation or an activity, in order to gain an advantage for themselves and to make things difficult for other people.
Truisms and Tautology. The setup for a debate need not be wholly fair, but there should be grounds for either side to argue. A debate such as “the sun is hot”' are so overwhelmingly in favor of one side, that the other side is best off kritiking the setup and asking for voters to disregard the proofs. [dart voting-policy].
- Definition of taught: give information about or instruction in (a subject or skill).
- Definition of school (disputed): any institution at which instruction is given in a particular discipline.
- Have one or more teachers give instruction
- Have an assigned administrator
- Are based in one or more buildings
- Contain enrolled or prospectively enrolled students
- CON continues to argue about the semantics of the word "school" saying that it excludes universities and colleges for some reason but has he said why?
- OBJECTION, CON has made two different points that contradict one another.
- CON argued in round one that school does not include colleges and universities because that isn't its conventional use and the resolution doesn't mention them (presumably a university isn't a school?) but then says that for our debate this definition would include dancing schools.
- CON round one: "The word "school" in our context is obviously referring to the institution educating children, that is what the debate has always been about. The resolution and the description lack the words "college" and "university" and are generally devoid of any attempt to signify an unconventional usage of the term"
- But going by his first-round assertion, would he not also say that dancing schools are not included in the resolution?
- These two statements cannot be true at the same time. It is special pleading to say that universities aren't schools because they aren't in the resolution, and arent how people would use school in reference to education, but then go on to say that dancing schools would be included as schools under a definition going against your own reasons for removing universities.
- CON drops my argument that every reputable education board and or online dictionary would define schools including universities and colleges, as well as the many examples I provide.
- But this argument has been refuted by CON's own Britannica source which claimed in round one that "In 1950 Pope Pius XII released an encyclical confirming that there is no intrinsic conflict between the theory of evolution and the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church."
- Creationism does not preclude evolution and the two are not mutually exclusive. Quite frankly your argument is irrelevant.
- Evolution proves the development of organisms, creationism seeks to theorize the origins of the universe itself. Your argument is irrelevant.
- CON argues a point here that his own sources disagree with that creationism precludes evolution and one or the other must be true, but as CON fell into after his round one case, even the Pope doesn't believe this.
- "On October 27, 2014, Pope Francis issued a statement at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences that "Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the notion of creation"
- Science history is taught in science class, such as the geocentric model and spontaneous generation
- The definition isn't defensive at all, in fact, it came straight from oxford English languages and CON has not provided a single counter definition as pointed out in round two.
- Why is faith relevant here? We have faith in many things. I am just arguing that creationism should be taught.
- There are many theories for the origin of the universe all are uncertain and all require different amounts of faith.
- Teaching creationism does not necessitate that anyone accepts a particular religion. In fact, creationism can be completely a-religious. It just pertains to specific acts of divine creation.
- All the legal cases are irrelevant as we could be debating something entirely different.
- CON has dropped many points in this debate, such as my listing how his own metrics of what is and isn't teaching contradict each other in round one. Please vote PRO>
Description: Creationism refers to the belief that the universe and living organisms originate from specific acts of divine creation, as in the biblical account, rather than by natural processes such as evolution.......PRO in R3: Creationism does not preclude evolution and the two are not mutually exclusive.
All the legal cases are irrelevant as we could be debating something entirely different....Creationism should be taught in history because it is an important aspect of history....I think there are very convincing arguments that creationism should be taught in religious studies....Creationism is also a theory and aspect of philosophy and in that regard, it should be taught in philosophy classes,
There's not much of substance to this debate and that stems from the fact that the debaters cannot agree on the terms throughout. To some degree, that's a factor of just finding areas of disagreement with what Con views as a truism debate and trying to figure out where the burdens lie. For the most part, I don't see this as all that important to the debate. Even if I assume that the resolution is a truism as defined, the CoC doesn't necessitate a vote against Pro for creating it or for slanting the debate in his favor with his definitions. I also don't know why the burdens debate goes on for so long when burdens stop mattering early on. If I buy that Pro's definitions are the ones I should use for the debate, Con presents few if any direct rebuttals, meaning that he has upheld his burden. If I buy Con's view of the definitions, then the issue of BoP goes away because Pro's basis for establishing who has it also goes away, and simultaneously, he fails to uphold the resolution.
So, this debate comes down to topicality. It's a rare thing for me (at least on this site) to evaluate whether a given way of defining the resolution is valid, but it's essential in this case. In cases where the instigator sets a definition in R1, particularly when that dramatically shifts the direction of the debate, it comes off as opportunistic, i.e. someone will accept expecting a certain debate, but end up having to argue something demonstrably different, granting greater advantage to Pro. I believe that happened here, especially as Pro was willing to define some terms in the description, but left out essential items to understand the shift. It also doesn't help that, from a contextual level, this debate clearly should have taken a different course. The title "Creationism should be taught in schools" has a common meaning, referring to the teaching of creationism as theory rather than in the abstract as something to be analyzed from a distance (e.g. as a part of history, philosophy, religion). So, I'd say that based on common usage and context, Pro's definition of the resolution doesn't match what his opponent could reasonably anticipate upon reading the resolution. As such, I'd say that the way he defined the topic is off-base, especially as it slants the topic much more heavily toward Pro.
But even in cases like this, I'm looking for contender to make these points and argue why the debate should have gone a different way. In that respect, Con could have done better. There's a comparison with teaching things like alchemy, though appealing to absurdity doesn't get the point across that there's something wrong with the framing of the debate. The math point manages to demonstrate it a little more clearly, though even then he explains that the express purpose is to generate mathematicians (which Pro points out isn't true of everyone who learns math) rather than give people the tools to actually utilize mathematics in their everyday lives, which would've better gotten the point across. The point is better captured by talking about teaching language and science as means of imparting skills or knowledge of a given field. I don't see a response to that side of Con's point, instead saying that since this differs from his point about mathematicians, it can be thrown out. Contrasting rebuttals don't cancel each other out, particularly not a contrast like this. I need to see a reason from Pro why teaching creationism and teaching about creationism are both reasonable interpretations of this resolution, yet all he does is say that Con doesn't challenge his definition. He challenges it contextually. He doesn't have to present an alternative definition. Pro had to rebut his contextual standard, and I don't see it.
After R1, I'm just not given anything substantive by either debater to affect this issue, and since deciding it also decides the debate from where I'm sitting, I vote Con.
Arguments:
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3381/comment-links/41652
Sources:
(in order of what you should read them)
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3381/comment-links/41653
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3381/comment-links/41655
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3381/comment-links/41654
Conduct:
(in order of what you should read them)
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3381/comment-links/41656
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3381/comment-links/41657
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3381/comment-links/41658
Pro's case is largely a semantics kritik, executed via hiding his definitions until R1; and then cherry-picking ones against common usage, in a basic lawyering tactic. Ultimately pro himself doesn't even seem to buy that, as he switches to advocating a different form of creationism than he locked in on originally.
Pro argues general information on the belief existing part of history and science, in addition to religious studies at a university level. In addition to philosophy just because. All this counts as teaching it.
Con uses an effective appeal to absurdity to challenge this notion, via pointing out that it would be the same to claim they are teaching "alchemy, flat earth theory and slavery." He then builds the distinction in teaching using math as an example showing how the word is understood in common English.
Pro does an ok defense of the math with pointing out how few students go on to become mathematicians by trade.
Semantics:
Con immediately attacks the BoP rests on the contender proclamation as disingenuous, as well as the claim that school usually refers to universities instead of the much more common k-12 environment.
Pro challenges that schools ought to include any place of learning, to include trade schools (I'm scratching my head at this one; but con misses it, so not damning).
Con catches that pro is having to use secondary definitions, and calls to pro's own sources that include dancing schools as a reference to his cherry-picked definition to dismiss it from consideration.
Pro basically calls it unfair to have his case attacked on multiple fronts here (I'm left somewhat curious what a dancer needs to know about creation myths).
Con further builds that creationism refers to an anti-science movement, linked directly to pro's own definition.
Pro oddly immediately at the start of R2 doubles down insisting that con's wrong and that his definition is binding... The definition that con agrees to, and was just leveraged against pro's case. Later in R2 pro does better by trying to separate his case from the movement, by reminding us he is not endorsing all other ideas that movement would demand.
Intelligent Design:
Pro quotes the pope, to argue that we should teach ID. Pro goes to some lengths here about how ID doesn't contradict evolution.
The big obvious problem here is that it's pre-refuted by con having already reminded us with the authority of the pope that ID goes against the branch of creationism this debate is centered on. Which pro catches and reminds of of the "rather than" part of the definition.
Pro tries to double down on ID in a repetition fallacy, which fails to challenge his chosen and locked in definition for creationism being specifically mutually exclusive. This is ironic given the earlier lawyering, and then trying to move the goalpost for the one definition which was pre-agreed.
Ultimately, without some value shown to teaching that evolution is wrong (as the specific branch of creationism this debate began on demands), I cannot favor pro, even while I do respect his efforts. In retrospect, cons case could have been a lot stronger with explicit focus on the value of science over superstition, but it was pro who held the primary BoP for the proposed change.
SOURCES CON PART 2
I will now explain why linking to a Google search is not qualified as a source from Con and why/how Con doesn't really leverage Pro's source against Pro whatsoever.
Con tells us 'Oxford definition' but to work out that he isn't bluffing or misleading us, readers of the debate need to not only open the Google search, they need to scroll down and furthermore have decent understanding of Google's site mechanics in the sense of that the first shown definitions on a page only let you know which link they are attached to by a small, hard-to-notice 'Definitions from Oxford Languages' written under 'definitions'. I am telling you, it is not easy to work that out for anybody who has less than slightly above-average computer literacy, I am pretty knowledgable about computers and know what most people do or don't know. The first linked URL below that for me was Wikipedia (but that's partly tailored to my previous searches etc) in fact, Oxford Dictionaries barely shows for me at all (won't specify where, that's my Google Data personal business). If another user who didn't realise that they had to click the tiny text under the very very top 'definitions' where it says 'Definitions from Oxford Languages' (clicking on the 'Oxford Languages') they'd never be able to ascertain with any remote ease that the definitions shown actually were Oxford definitions.
As for the attempt to leverage Pro's point against him. Pro utilised that source to prove that Creationism has been the subject of many debates and legal cases. That was not whatsoever the source that Pro used when defining 'school'. Con cannot play the victim to Pro twisting semantics inventing something called a 'semantical fallacy' as if defining a word how an opponent doesn't like is a fallacy. Also, just on a point of irony/note, 'semantical' as a term itself is a borderline semantic fallacy but it's fair enough, I am aware that Con is not a native English speaker and it does count somewhat as a word just not officially as such. 'Semantic' works both to describe semantics and to be the adjective of semantics-related stuff.
So, for the third actually used source by Con that wasn't just about complaining what Pro said/did, comes this source:
3) https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Moving-the-Goalposts
A near-blog-like 'catch all' 'come here to prove the fallacy' American .Com website
It is also important to note there is financial motive at play, this is clear because the only part of the website that would let you know about the owners or website's aim advertises a book and at the bottom of the webpage warns you who it's all (the website's contents) copyrighted to. There seems very little about it that is academically reliable other than the topic choice of logical fallacy.
Reliability: Mediocre at best, usage ~ To prove that moving the goalposts is a known thing that debaters do which this website considers a logical fallacy.
I am guessing that because of the popularity of the website (we can presume it, it's kinda mainstream amongst debate nerds/geeks), this was utilised to prove that Con wasn't making up a 'moving the goalposts' fallacy but was hearing about it from others and using it in a non made-up way. I find this amusing not because it was a bad idea to use the source but there were so many times in the debate where Con made claims that he did not source even to prove that it was popularly recognised as a decent idea. That's not too important to my vote though so I'll just leave it.
Sources:
Pro. Extremely reliable, consistent sourcing.
Examples
=====
1)
https://ncse.ngo/ten-major-court-cases-about-evolution-and-creationism
Non governmental organisation
National Center for Science Education
Reliability: Extreme, usage ~ Creationism has been the subject of many debates and legal cases
This is important to the case of Pro as it proves that Creationism is useful even in real world application for students to be aware of if they are to pursue law and/or politics.
======
2) https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/cosmology/ (wrongly done by the hyperlinked 'cosmology' but made clear to be the intended link by being in the bottom of the bibliography at the bottom of Round 1).
Edu link (educational)
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Reliability: Extreme, usage ~ proving that, via fields such as cosmology, Creationism is an important part of philosophy and that is a reason why to include Creationism as a taught part of school syllabuses.
=====
3) https://www.cde.ca.gov/ds/si/ds/dos.asp
Officially Californian-Government-Approved
California Department of Education
Reliability: Significantly High, usage ~ proving that 'school' which is a debate-topic word and essential to define, actually officially includes higher education facilities.
I will post this to link to in my RFD, this will cover the Arguments point allocation:
Con's own source about Creationism says this: "In 1950 Pope Pius XII released an encyclical confirming that there is no intrinsic conflict between the theory of evolution and the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, provided that Catholics still believe that humans are endowed with a soul created by God. In 1996 Pope John Paul II expanded and reiterated the church’s position, affirming evolution as "more than a hypothesis." and Pro strongly points this out in Round 2 as well as quoting a similar source on Wikipedia regarding these announcements. If Popes themselves are declaring evolution to work in tandem with Creationism, Con's point that we ought to discard Creationism from school curricula because it contradicts evolution... to back this up he points out that most Creationists consider it as valid as evolution (that isn't proof it contradicts). He did however prove that most creationists consider it as scientifically valid as evolution but yet again didn't prove that it wasn't as scientifically valid as evolution. In fact the only point he makes himself on the matter seems to be this: "creationism stands out as a weird outlier today."
That is literally his only point that wasn't just reiterating his sources on most Creationists not considering the Theory of Evolution as being superior in validity.
In contrast, Pro almost wins the entire debate in Round 2 by what is said at the end. Firstly, Pro successfully lies about moving the goalposts (Con never really explains how they were moved again, just cries about the debate being a truism and that schools are not always universities, but religion is taught even at school level so...). Then, after having already twisted Con's source against him, Pro says both can be taught (which Con's own source in Round 1 in the QUOTED SECTION THAT CON HAD AS AN EXCERPT says that most Creationists want both Creationism and Evolution being taught side by side. Then, Pro points out that Con's complaint about the motives of Creationists 'has been proven to be irrelevant because just because you believe something to be a more largely sinister movement, does not mean it is understood, taught, and accepted in this way.'
The remainder of the debate from Con is a continual character assassination of Pro, breaking of the Kritik rule to justify goalpost movement (which he doesn't move back, ever, he just keeps saying they are moved and that that is wrong but doesn't move them back) and basically a tantrum. Let me be clear, if the CoC really literally ruled out truisms, Con broke the CoC knowingly by accepting and enabling a banned debate to take place. So, really he should be begging voters to rethink that notion or they'd realise that he just accepted this for an easy win, instead of the accusation he has that Pro made an autowin Truism.
I'm not sure what you see in Barney's RFD that would invalidate it based on the voting rules of the site, but I said as much when I removed his first vote. He stretched the rules a bit on Conduct, but his vote is clearly sufficient under the voting standards for Arguments.
No...is this a joke?
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>Reported Vote: Barney // Mod action: Not Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 3 to Con
>Reason for Decision:
See Vote Tab
>Reason for Mod Action:
The voter provides more than sufficient reasoning to meet the voting standards for awarding arguments.
Mod action was taken and conduct was removed, but as quoted in the mod report:
" the argument points are sufficiently justified"
-Whiteflame
Other than it not agreeing with you, what (if anything) do you consider bad about the vote?
Can someone please cast another vote. All of the votes were removed and the the same person that casted a previously bad vote has obviously done so again
Noted. I understand your perspective on it better, though for the purposes of what suffices as a Kritik, I think this gets into some troublesome territory. I would personally agree with you that this kind of tactic is problematic, so this is largely an issue of how it applies to the rules of this debate and the voting standards in general.
While I disagree on if it was or was not a K, as a moderator I believe I should be held to a higher standard so take no offense at the removal for something which was getting into grey areas.
As for it being a K, I'll give a hypothetical example:
For the debate Dogs Meow, pro holds off definitions until R1, at which point he defines dogs as cats. This is inherently a semantic kritik, in which a commonly understood word is changed out for an disharmonious meaning to what anyone would assume going into the debate.
While this debate is note that bad, it takes the same form.
That said, I'll leave conduct out when I revote.
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>Reported Vote: Barney // Mod action: Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 4 to Con
>Reason for Decision:
See Comment #35
>Reason for Mod Action:
While the argument points are sufficiently justified, the conduct point is insufficient. The voter appears to justify this on the basis of both the perceived bait and switch, which isn't a sufficient basis for awarding conduct, and the perception that Pro used a Kritik in their argument, which is only lightly explained. Much as it is a frustrating tactic to wait until R1 to give definitions essential to the topic, particularly if they are slanted, that doesn't make it a Kritik. Since both sides ended up trying to redefine the topic, it also makes this decision too selective.
Barney's RFD:
Pro's case is largely a semantics kritik, executed via hiding his definitions until R1.
Pro argues general information on the belief existing part of history and science, in addition to religious studies at a university level. In addition to philosophy just because. All this counts as teaching it.
Con uses an effective appeal to absurdity to challenge this notion, via pointing out that it would be the same to claim they are teaching "alchemy, flat earth theory and slavery." He then builds the distinction in teaching using math as an example showing how the word is understood in common English.
Pro does an ok defense of the math with pointing out how few students go on to become mathematicians by trade.
Semantics:
Con immediately attacks the BoP rests on the contender proclamation as disingenuous, as well as the claim that school usually refers to universities instead of the much more common k-12 environment.
Pro challenges that schools ought to include any place of learning, to include trade schools (I'm scratching my head at this one; but con misses it, so not damning).
Con catches that pro is having to use secondary definitions, and calls to pro's own sources that include dancing schools as a reference to his cherry-picked definition to dismiss it from consideration.
Pro basically calls it unfair to have his case attacked on multiple fronts here (I'm left somewhat curious what a dancer needs to know about creation myths).
Con further builds that creationism refers to an anti-science movement, linked directly to pro's own definition.
Pro oddly immediately at the start of R2 doubles down insisting that con's wrong and that his definition is binding... The definition that con agrees to, and was just leveraged against pro's case. Later in R2 pro does better by trying to separate his case from the movement, by reminding us he is not endorsing all other ideas that movement would demand.
Intelligent Design:
Pro quotes the pope, to argue that we should teach ID. Pro goes to some lengths here about how ID doesn't contradict evolution.
The big obvious problem here is that it's pre-refuted by con having already reminded us with the authority of the pope that ID goes against the branch of creationism this debate is centered on. Which pro catches and reminds of of the "rather than" part of the definition.
Pro tries to double down on ID in a repetition fallacy, which fails to challenge his chosen and locked in definition for creationism being specifically mutually exclusive.
Conduct should be obvious. While the bait and switch type debate is frowned upon, it might not be enough, but he specifically set a "Kritiks are banned" rule in the description.
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>Reported Vote: RationalMadman // Mod action: Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 6 to Pro
>Reason for Decision:
See Comment #33
>Reason for Mod Action:
While the argument points are sufficiently justified, both the conduct and source points are insufficient. For the former, Pro points out that both sides are guilty of moving the goalposts, but claims that only Con is guilty of breaking the rule regarding Kritiks. It's unclear that the character assassination he points to is sufficient to award conduct as well, since it appears related to the design of the debate rather than functioning as a personal attack. Regarding sources, considering the number that each side uses, it is reductive to limit the analysis of Con's sources to two that he presented in R1. The use of specific source types like .org and .edu also does not suffice as a reason to award these points.
RationalMadman's RFD:
There are several correct points Con brings to the table, what Con doesn't do is capitalise on them nearly enough to win the debate.
Pro did significantly shift the goalposts from the get-go, yet Con never shifts them back.
Pro did write a near-truism in the resolution if one believes that Creationism as an idea should be taught in philosophy and religious studies, Con doesn't deal with this truism or prove why it's inherently unforgivable.
Pro did have a flaw, since they don't defend Creationism as necessarily being true but here is where the problem really set in... For Con to handle these things, he has to Kritik the goalposts/framework of Pro, Kritik the debate as being a ridiculous/absurd truism or Kritik the idea of Creationism itself as being a valid contender to be taught at schools. The debate's description, which both debaters agree to upon acceptance of the debate, explicitly bans Kritiks. This is the problem for Con.
Con's own source about Creationism says this: "In 1950 Pope Pius XII released an encyclical confirming that there is no intrinsic conflict between the theory of evolution and the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, provided that Catholics still believe that humans are endowed with a soul created by God. In 1996 Pope John Paul II expanded and reiterated the church’s position, affirming evolution as "more than a hypothesis." and Pro strongly points this out in Round 2 as well as quoting a similar source on Wikipedia regarding these announcements. If Popes themselves are declaring evolution to work in tandem with Creationism, Con's point that we ought to discard Creationism from school curricula because it contradicts evolution... to back this up he points out that most Creationists consider it as valid as evolution (that isn't proof it contradicts). He did however prove that most creationists consider it as scientifically valid as evolution but yet again didn't prove that it wasn't as scientifically valid as evolution. In fact the only point he makes himself on the matter seems to be this: "creationism stands out as a weird outlier today."
That is literally his only point that wasn't just reiterating his sources on most Creationists not considering the Theory of Evolution as being superior in validity.
In contrast, Pro almost wins the entire debate in Round 2 by what is said at the end. Firstly, Pro successfully lies about moving the goalposts (Con never really explains how they were moved again, just cries about the debate being a truism and that schools are not always universities, but religion is taught even at school level so...). Then, after having already twisted Con's source against him, Pro says both can be taught (which Con's own source in Round 2 in the QUOTED SECTION THAT CON HAD AS AN EXCERPT says that most Creationists want both Creationism and Evolution being taught side by side. Then, Pro points out that Con's complaint about the motives of Creationists 'has been proven to be irrelevant because just because you believe something to be a more largely sinister movement, does not mean it is understood, taught, and accepted in this way.'
The remainder of the debate from Con is a continual character assassination of Pro, breaking of the Kritik rule to justify goalpost movement (which he doesn't move back, ever, he just keeps saying they are moved and that that is wrong but doesn't move them back) and basically a tantrum. Let me be clear, if the CoC really literally ruled out truisms, Con broke the CoC knowingly by accepting and enabling a banned debate to take place. So, really he should be begging voters to rethink that notion or they'd realise that he just accepted this for an easy win, instead of the accusation he has that Pro made an autowin Truism.
As for sources, not only did 2 of Con's sources in the very first Round of debate really contradict his case that Creationism inherently needs to rule out evolution to work but Pro consistently uses .org and .edu sources only resorting to Wikipedia for covering general overviews like the Popes' stances on Creationism.
You replied to me clearly asking it to whiteflame.
Please clarify what you're trying to ask.
I'm not asking how your RFD will pass review, no. Totally different question.
If you're curious about my behavior, you should probably ask me instead of someone else. ... Or you know, scroll on this page to where I already answered the question (such as in #18).
If you mean why an obviously bad vote was reviewed, while an a near infinitely more detailed vote is still pending review: Time and effort constraints.
more importantly, I'm curious how Barney can justify that con didn't kritik.
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>Reported Vote: Phenenas // Mod action: Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 4 to Con
>Reason for Decision:
Pro broke their own "kritiks are banned" rule starting round 1. That alone is enough for conduct and arguments to go to Con.
>Reason for Mod Action:
While decisions may be based on the rules of a debate to award both arguments and conduct, this voter has not explained how Pro violated the stated rule within the debate and, upon inspection of his arguments, it is unclear that a violation occurred. The voter must justify the interpretation that Pro used a kritik in their argument, as it appears that Con did not accuse Pro of doing so (the closest thing I can find is Con saying that Pro defined the debate in such a way as to make it a truism, which would require a kritik on Con's part to address, i.e. he expressed his frustration that he couldn't kritik Pro's argument without violating the rule). If the voter feels that his interpretation of Pro's argument is justified, then it must be clarified what argument he sees as a kritik and why.
But in that scenario, your vote was the really bad one.
Ragnar actually made a decent one there, but at least he did the right thing,
That debate was a destruction of the oponent on my part
https://www.debateart.com/debates/3328-biological-women-are-psychologically-better-suited-than-biological-men-to-raise-and-care-for-children
Sometimes, incompetent voting helps you out ;)
The resolution is creationism should be taught in schools, and I argued that creationism should be taught in schools.
Anyone who thinks I have made a single Kritik is completely wrong, and has no understanding of what the term means
Some people are so incompetent they can't even manage to cast a propper vote. It's absolutely revolting and reading this almost made me vomit in my mouth
Phenenas's vote is extremely short for a full debate with 30k characters per round. It is also a complete lie as I did not use a single Kritik. Regardless of the latter aspect, please remove it. I have reported it.
This whole debate is a kritik tbh.
Defining against common usage, is a basic semantics kritik.
defining terms is not a Kritik... come on.
Two people can read the same debate, and draw different conclusions about the outcome.
I believe a key place we differ is our understandings of kritiks. To me, pro was worse on this by immediately playing a semantics Kritik (which my vote wouldn't have known about to mention had I not read his case) into a debate to which he specifically set a rule against doing just that.
You did not properly read Pro's case. This is obvious in your RFD.
That is actually what Pro agreed to. That they should be taught about the religious model, not that it should be taught as a scientific model.
I am not twisting your words here, your words are the same goalpost.
My R1 conclusion:
"PRO has failed to meet his BoP when the goalpost is placed where it ought to be. ###The discussion is about whether or not schools should teach children that a religious modell of reality is a valid alternative to a scientific one###."
Show me where in the debate that you specifically explained your goalposts and your understanding of the BoP (not Pro's and why it isnt fair in your eyes but your own one)
I expected a fair debate, not a dishonest resolution with nonsensical choice of definitions and BoP from PRO'S side.
If you really believed in the movement to stop Novice doing this, you'd participate like I do, by warning others in the comments section and protesting without accepting the abusive and unbeatable debates. Instead, you opt to accept what you see as a violation of a 'truism rule' that you pretend to hold sacred and then expect others to appease you for accepting a debate that you say is against the code of conduct to even be taking place.
I wished to have a real debate with you, but you must learn to write resolutions that don't mislead or confuse the actual idea you want to debate. In this case, you argued for creationism as a study subject rather than the curriculum material, which was not what the resolution said.
Thank you for voting
Please mention your problems with it.
This has to be the worst vote I have ever seen. What a joke.
I keep having this form on nonsense placed upon me, and it's enough to tire someone out.
You've got less than an hour to post your defenses and rebuttals.
Lucy, a 3.2 million-year old fossil skeleton of a human ancestor, was discovered in 1974 in Hadar, Ethiopia.
Lucy, a 3.2 million-year old fossil skeleton of a human ancestor, was discovered in 1974 in Hadar, Ethiopia.
I debated this with seldiora
I believe this will be a tough debate, because I have never faced anyone with as high of a rank as you.
I look forward to the opportunity of debating you, and if all goes to plan, defeating you as well.
Good luck
It would be impossible for Con not to Kritik the assumption that Creationism is a valid theory to be teaching.