Mailbag - March 19, 2002
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Keep intelligent design out of public schools
This is in response to a Community Commentary by Rick Rainey (“Pilot
columnist too accepting of evolution,” Feb. 26).
If it gives Rainey comfort to believe in a busy God facilely creating
planet Earth, as well as the millions upon millions of present and
extinct creatures in his celestial lab, then so be it. Every known
culture and civilization has sought some answers to the great questions
of whence we came and whither we go.
If Rainey is really interested in creation mythology, then he should
know that the Old Testament’s version is among the least interesting,
inventive and exciting of the genre.
The enormous body of creation mythology is full of fascinating tales
and imagery. It deserves research for sheer enjoyment, if nothing else.
However, to attempt to interweave the gossamer of leaps of faith (a
six-day creation, a 60,000-year-old Earth, humans in the image of God,
etc.) with hard, scientific facts is an exercise in futility.
Fund religious schools. Publish anti-evolution tracts. Preach your
biblical mythology from the pulpit, from the street corner and from the
Internet. But, please, do not attempt to have that ancient mythology
forced upon California’s public school students. The world is confusing
enough and daunting enough already without deliberately turning out
citizens whose views of life on Earth will be viewed with amused contempt
outside the shelter of family and parish.
I believe, wholeheartedly, in the freedom of religion, and I believe
inalterably in our freedom from religion. That is the American way.
WALLACE W. WOOD
Costa Mesa
Intelligent design may be proven yet
The chattering classes are at it again: two letters on March 5
(Readers Respond, “Evolution wins over a couple readers”). And the same
morning’s Los Angeles Times reports on a quaint religious sect in Canada
that preaches that “scientists from another planet created all life on
Earth.”
Now there’s a revelation. Whereas Newport-Mesa trustee Wendy Leece has
heretofore only alluded to an intelligent designer, the Canadians have
outed him/her/them.
I know how tempting it is to write off designer creation as smoke and
mirrors, but that’s going too far. Wholly smoke says it all.
DICK LEWIS
Balboa Island
In classrooms, only teaching matters
As best teacher of the year awards go, the Pilot’s contention that
best teachers should be about best teaching is right on target
(Editorial, “Teacher of the year should be about teaching,” March 10).
As the 1998 winner of such an award in my own two-college district, I
am constantly reminded that our efforts to be great teachers must be at
the heart of all we do.
As important as academic freedom may be, nothing is more important
than how we engage our students -- with knowledge, positive energy and
enthusiasm. In the vital world of the classroom, nothing else matters.
LEE MALLORY
Newport Beach
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