And the beat goes on........
INTELLIGENT DESIGN: THE REAL SCIENCE OPTION?
Looking at Googles main news page today, there were featured a number of articles on this debate. 54 stories were listed, but many were repeats in different papers.
Some of the headlines: (My favorite above)
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'Intelligent design' debate: confusion vs. suppression
Cornell President Condemns Teaching Intelligent Design as Science
Scientists condemn 'intelligent design'
Ban design theory in class: scientists
'Intelligent Design' Scorned
Don't teach design theory: scientists
Intelligent design not science: experts
Intelligent design, evolution at odds
Does intelligent design need evidence for proof?
Scientists Agree 'Intelligent Design' Not Science
Will science lose to 'intelligent design'?
Thousands of Scientists Sign Petition Opposing the Teaching of Intelligent Design as Science
Scientists attack 'intelligent design'
Intelligent design theory under fire
EDIT: Plenty of arguments from both sides. Here is something else I just read. It is an Op/Ed piece that represents my position well.
'Intelligent design' plaintiffs are over-reacting
From the above article, author Donald Hoffman wrote:However, it seems that if Dover's intelligent design statement violates the U.S. Constitution through inferences to the existence of an intelligent designer, then official acknowledgments of our nation's Declaration of Independence, preambled by references to the ''Laws of Nature and of Nature's God'' and to people being ''endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights,'' should be a constitutional outrage by comparison.
In my view, the plaintiffs in the Dover case look a whole lot like the prosecutors in the ''monkey'' trial of Tennessee v. Scopes back in 1925. Dover's plaintiffs, like the Scopes prosecutors, represent a traditionalistic community gripped with irrational fears in realizing the unquestioned reign of their valued beliefs is threatened by an invasion of questioning intellect. In both cases, traditionalistic educators, both then and now, show an obsession with teaching their students what to think, while spurning a duty to teach them how to think. In either case, it's a disservice.