Pangloss62 |
05-30-2006 03:32 PM |
Patrick Henry Is Turning In His Grave
It's been recently reported that Christocentric Patrick Henry College is suffering an exodus of faculty. Why such teachers decided to work there in the first place is beyond me; if they just read some of the school's Bible-based tenets, they never would have taken the job:
Creation. Any biology, Bible or other courses at PHC dealing with creation will teach creation from the understanding of Scripture that God's creative work, as described in Genesis 1:1-31, was completed in six twenty-four hour days. All faculty for such courses will be chosen on the basis of their personal adherence to this view. PHC expects its faculty in these courses, as in all courses, to expose students to alternate theories and the data, if any, which support those theories. In this context, PHC in particular expects its biology faculty to provide a full exposition of the claims of the theory of Darwinian evolution, intelligent design and other major theories while, in the end, teach creation as both biblically true and as the best fit to observed data.
http://www.phc.edu/
Perhaps the most ludicrous notion from above is that earth "...was completed in six twenty-four hour days." I can't think of ANY science teacher who would embrace such a notion. This is not just about the concept of evolution, it's about the principle of uniformitarianism, that the physical processes we observe today are the same processes that have always occurred. We know how long it takes, for example, for sediments to be deposited and to eventually become rock. More to the point, why even teach science at all if your entire world view is based on supernatural forces, virgin births, and someone "rising" from the dead? Where is the "observed data" on that?
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