Scopes Trial Essay

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    Creationism and Evolution have always been a topic in America since the Scopes Trial. The Scopes Trial took place in 1928 when the Supreme Court was deciding whether schools should teach Evolution or Creationism. The foundation of evolution is based upon the belief that the origin of all ordered complex systems, including living creatures, can be explained by natural laws without the intervention of God. In that trial the Supreme Court came to a conclusion that Evolution was banned and that creationism

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    The John Scopes Trial

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    a campaign to get rid of modernism in order to battle the new liberties that challenged traditional ethics. There were two sides to the debate of the Scopes trial when it took place in the year of 1925 which defined freedom differently. Times were changing and things weren’t the same anymore causing indifferences between individuals. John Scopes, was a teacher

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    Majoritarian Democracy in Edward Larson’s Summer For the Gods The Scopes trial, writes Edward Larson, to most Americans embodies “the timeless debate over science and religion.” (265) Written by historians, judges, and playwrights, the history of the Scopes trial has caused Americans to perceive “the relationship between science and religion in . . . simple terms: either Darwin or the Bible was true.” (265) The road to the trial began when Tennessee passed the Butler Act in 1925 banning the teaching

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    Throughout United States history, Americans have always remain separated on certain issues. Edward Larson’s work Summer for the Gods exemplifies just how issues split the population. Larson uses the Scopes Trial of 1925 to demonstrate to the rivalry between modernists and traditionalists in the early 20th century. Charles Dawson discovered fossilized human bones known as the “Piltdown skull” and bridged a gap in history that seemed to confirm Darwin’s theory of evolution. "Darwin 's account of random

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    received. In March 1925 a law is passed in Tennessee named the “Butler Act,” which prohibited teachers from teaching about evolution in any state funded school. John Scopes, a teacher in the small town of Dayton, Tennessee, taught a lesson to his students about evolution months after the state passed the Butler Act. Although the Scopes Trial provided a precedent for the clash of traditionalistic and modernistic thinking it created a paradigm shift in the traditional structure of the school and education

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    In 1925, a young Tennessee school teacher named John T. Scopes defied the state’s law prohibiting the teaching of evolution. Scopes was arrested and the case immediately got national headlines causing William Jennings Bryan to announce his intention to join the prosecution. Then, the ACLU got involved and offered to defend Scopes. When Darrow heard about the case, he said he would defend the school teacher free of charge. To Darrow’s thinking, Bryan was the embodiment of all those aspects of rural

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    The documentary American Experience: Monkey Trials by PBS follows the famous trial of John Scopes. The trial was given the nickname, “The Monkey Trial” since it had to deal with Darwin’s: Theory of Evolution and whether it should be taught in schools. In 1925, John Scopes was arrested for teaching evolution in a public school room in Dayton, Tennessee. He violated the Butler Act. The Act “made it a crime for any public school teacher to quote ‘teach any theory that denies the story of the Divine

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    Evolution Of The 1920s

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    contradicted the Christian theory of Divine Creation as described in the Bible. This caused many religious fundamentalists to fight against it. They took their battle to the law books, and they were challenged by pro-evolution modernists in the Scopes "Monkey Trial" of 1925. The theory of Evolution was developed by

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    John Scopes Controversy

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    evolution taught in classrooms; the American Civil Liberties Union challenged said law with the help of John Scopes, who was a teacher that taught the theory of evolution in his classroom. In the trial, Clarence Darrow represented Scopes and faced off William Jennings Bryan, who was against evolution being taught and a well-known criminal defense lawyer. In the first section of the book, before the trial, the foundation for the controversy was arranged. Charles Dawson discovered bones and other fragments

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    in the 1920’s. The 1920’s was an important time in education. The decision in the Scopes trial

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