Scopes Trial Essay

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    Religion and science both face off in ¨The Scopes ‘Monkey’ Trial,” the case that America went “bananas” over. Two men duel to prove their points about evolution and whether it defies state laws or not. The conflict of John T. Scopes defying the Butler Act, an act prohibiting public school teachers from denying Biblical accounts of man’s origin, was temporarily resolved with Scopes being fined, but this compromise was not entirely settled until the Butler Act was repealed years later. Biblical theology

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    those who acclaimed the bible. The conviction of John Scopes in the Scopes Trial was caused by political factors like the laws passed and the trial itself, the geographic factors such as the location also known as the Bible Belt and lastly the primary factor is social factors, such as religious beliefs. Politics influenced the

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    This paper discusses how the film, Inherit The Wind, portrays the Scopes Monkey Trial. The film showed both sides of the argument fairly. It was conveying a message that a person should try to understand and respect each opinion when arguing their own side. Three evidentiary issues of the trial in the film will also be discussed. The three issues that are objected to in the film are an opinion question, hearsay, and relevance. The judge sustained all three objections, saying that they were inadmissible

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    of The Scopes Trial. But there are actually some differences between the two. The book Inherit the Wind has about three acts, the beginning, middle, and end. The Scopes Trial lasts for eight days. The beginning of The Scopes Trial and Inherit the wind are pretty similar. On the first day everybody is coming from all over to watch the trial. In Inherit the Wind Brady and Drummond come as lawyers. Later that day they all come together for a picnic. The Picnic didn't happen in The Scopes Trial. Finally

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    Cultural Confrontations of the 1920’s The 1920s were a time of change for the United States. Following the First World War there was a rush of new cultural, social, and artistic dynamism, partly fuelled by the Progressivism movement that was cut short when American entered the Great War. This decade was defined by a change from more rural farm life to industrialism in big cities. The shift from the frugality and traditional family values or previous generations to the happy-go-lucky consumerism

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    The Scopes Trial

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    in reality, it brought people to a certain desperation to get at least a sip of an alcoholic beverage. The Ku Klux Klan marched to Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington on August 8, 1925 which succeeded in attracting national attention (1920’s KKK). John Scopes, a Tennessee schoolteacher, is arrested for teaching evolution, in violation of new state law banning the teaching of Darwin. The worst of times in the 1920s encapsulated the whole decade. At midnight, January 16, 1920, the United States went dry;

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    The Salem Witch Trials: Trial by Rope The salem witch trials began in salem village, Massachusetts, 1692. The witch trials were when people believed in the devil giving power to witches to be able to harm others in return for their loyalty. The trials originally began in Europe as early as the 1500’s and was everywhere in colonial New England. Eventually, the horrid realities of life in Puritan Salem Village , Massachusetts at the time included the side- effects of the British war with France in

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    point across. Mencken, a writer that covered the Scopes trial, is an example of how stereotypes of southerners such as the Tennesseans, were used to compromise the outlook on how the trial was conducted and portrayed. Evidence shows that urban writers, such as Mencken himself, unfairly portrayed Tennesseans throughout the Scopes trial by insulting their intelligence and their overall demeanor. William Jennings Bryan was an attorney on the Scopes trial that supported the Butler bill which prevented

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    Scopes Monkey Trial

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    the Scopes Monkey trial. The Teapot Dome Scandal was caused because of a lack of regulation in the United States Government. Albert Bacon Fall had secretly granted the rights of the federal oil reserve to Harry Sinclair who was in charge of the Mammoth Oil

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    Scopes Monkey Trial

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    the Scopes Monkey Trial, since the Tennessee teacher John Scopes was the defendant in the case. However, as Ronald Numbers states in his book, Galileo Goes to Jail: and other myths about science and religion, this was a response “to the invitation of the American Civil Liberties Union, which opposed the statute on free-speech grounds, [so] town leaders in Dayton, Tennessee, decided to test the new statute in court by arranging a friendly indictment of a local science teacher named John Scopes.” In

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