Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Eugenie Scott

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American anthropologist Eugenie Scott.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Eugenie Scott

Eugenie Carol Scott is an American physical anthropologist, a former university professor and educator who has been active in opposing the teaching of young Earth creationism and intelligent design in schools. She coined the term "Gish gallop" to describe a fallacious rhetorical technique which consists in overwhelming an interlocutor with as many individually-weak arguments as possible, in order to prevent rebuttal of the whole argument.

You can't really be scientifically literate if you don't understand evolution. And you can't be an educated member of society if you don't understand science.
Creationists who want religious ideas taught as scientific fact in public schools continue to adapt to courtroom defeats by hiding their true aims under ever changing guises.
I learned very early on that it's necessary but not sufficient for scientists to go to school board meetings and say, 'We shouldn't be teaching creationism.' Being right doesn't mean it'll pass.
In my opinion, using creation and evolution as topics for critical-thinking exercises in primary and secondary schools is virtually guaranteed to confuse students about evolution and may lead them to reject one of the major themes in science.
Evolution makes biology make sense. And if you don't teach your students the evolutionary core of biology, you're making it harder for them. — © Eugenie Scott
Evolution makes biology make sense. And if you don't teach your students the evolutionary core of biology, you're making it harder for them.
There's a bait and switch going on here because the critics want the textbooks to question whether evolution occurred. And of course they don't because scientists don't question whether evolution occurred.
Evolution is not controversial in the field of science. It's controversial in the public sphere because public education is highly politicized.
People don't show up here (at the courtroom) because they believe evolution is bad science. They show up because they believe that if they accept evolution, then they are abandoning their religious beliefs. They see it as an either/or proposition: Either evolution happened, or God loves you.
I never say that evolution is a fact. Evolution is a theory. It's much more important than a fact, because theories explain things.
Science is a limited way of knowing, looking at just the natural world and natural causes. There are a lot of ways human beings understand the universe - through literature, theology, aesthetics, art or music.
I think what bothers me so much of the time, is they take the data and theory and distort it. They must know they're distorting.
Public schools are where the next generation of leaders are educated and where cultural exchange will take place.
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