CYKIAE (Christ You Know It Ain't Easy)
Darrow … had grand matters to place before the country — issues of academic liberty, free thought, and scientific inquiry. He hoped, by calling scientists to the stand, to educate the public and alert them to the threat posed by rural zealots with their silly lockstep creed. And the defense was aided by public expectations. The country was looking forward to a spectacular debate on Monkeys and Man, led by the titans Darrow and Bryan. So wrote John Farrell in his biography, Clarence Darrow, Attorney for the Damned. Was that add on just a clever title or did it conceal more truth about the Scopes Monkey Trial than Farrell realised? Bryan may have thought that he was on the side of God, but Darrow knew that he was on higher moral ground, he was defending science and the right of the evolutionary scientists to tell the truth that man was descended from the apes and that Bryan’s God was dead. Isn’t that what the Darrow character was saying in the movie Inherit the Wind in that passage I opened the last programme with - for this insight and for this knowledge we must abandon our faith in the pleasant poetry of Genesis. Why? Because God was dead. Darrow could unembarrassedly say to William Jennings Bryan: I am holier than thou. Or could he? Tag words: Clarence Darrow; John Farrell; Scopes Monkey Trial; William Jennings Bryan; God; Genesis; American Civil Liberties Union; ACLU; Edward J Larson; Summer for the Gods; Dudley Field Malone; John Randolph Neal; Arthur Garfield Hays; Henry Linville; Darwin’s Theory of Evolution; Academic freedom; Harry F Ward; American Association of University Professors; Christianity; Jonathon Wells; Zombie Science; Charles Darwin; Richard Dawkins; River Out of Eden; The Origin of Species; Icons of Evolution; The Descent of Man; Freedom of speech;
228 episodios
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