Comments
Magmagan t1_ja7xexf wrote
Also, god damn the Butler Act. The whole debacle above happened in 1925... The law was only repealed in 1967! No wonder why we are so divided and ignorant to this day, this was so recent
mojoegojoe t1_ja81nwa wrote
It's crazy how political structure such as this has such ramifications throughout the whole environment. He didn't even reach the class he was getting sued for-
"After the trial, he admitted to reporter William Kinsey Hutchinson "I didn't violate the law,"[8] explaining that he had skipped the evolution lesson and that his lawyers had coached his students to go on the stand;"
Drewy99 t1_ja88ywj wrote
>No wonder why we are so divided and ignorant to this day
Thanks Obama...
/s
BigCommieMachine t1_ja88xnx wrote
Very similar to Rosa Parks.
The only real way to overturn an unconstitutional law is to have someone be prosecuted under it.
rosstedfordkendall t1_ja8i411 wrote
That was the big surprise for me when I learned about it more in depth. In grade school, it was presented as "religion vs. evolution." Then later in life I learned it was mostly staged (at least initially) and there was more nuance to it. The fact that the textbook also advocated eugenics was something that didn't get mentioned a lot.
Inherit the Wind portrays it more straightforward, but was using it as a metaphor for McCarthyism.
Magmagan t1_ja7wrcd wrote
[deleted] t1_ja7il4y wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_ja8ijhg wrote
[removed]
jayessell t1_ja7h6cs wrote
See the motion picture 'Inherit the Wind'.
no_step t1_ja88s4j wrote
Inherit the Wind is a highly fictionalized retelling of the events, don't take it as history
Darkstar1988 t1_ja8oan4 wrote
True, but it's not unrealistic that something similar could happen.
jungl3j1m t1_ja823gm wrote
I performed it onstage with my community theater. I was Hornbeck, who has some excellent lines.
Isaacleroy t1_ja82vfg wrote
I also played Hornbeck at a summer stock theatre many moons ago. Lots of great lines! Good memories.
[deleted] t1_ja7ik88 wrote
[removed]
No-Caterpillar-308 t1_ja9eo69 wrote
I saw it in high school years ago. Couldn't stop singing 🎶Gimme that ooold time religion , gimme ooold time religion🎵
Mammoth-Mud-9609 t1_ja7or8h wrote
America seems to be heading backwards towards this ignorant era again.
foo-jitsoo t1_ja7s4pn wrote
“I have a foreboding of an America in my children's or grandchildren's time -- when the United States is a service and information economy; when nearly all the manufacturing industries have slipped away to other countries; when awesome technological powers are in the hands of a very few, and no one representing the public interest can even grasp the issues; when the people have lost the ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question those in authority; when, clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our horoscopes, our critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what's true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into superstition and darkness...
The dumbing down of American is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30 second sound bites (now down to 10 seconds or less), lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance.”
​
Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World, 1996
Mammoth-Mud-9609 t1_ja7uw9n wrote
PBS is the best thing in America.
KingfisherDays t1_ja8corq wrote
Incredibly prescient by Sagan
spiritplumber t1_ja8p96q wrote
Sagan is arguably the only scientist to get a song by Nightwish (although they also cooperated with Richard Dawkins).
LeapIntoInaction t1_ja7pw1u wrote
What makes you think that ignorant hicks ever went away?
[deleted] t1_ja7zv2j wrote
[removed]
james_otter t1_ja80wwx wrote
Wouldn’t be surprising to see a revival in 2025
Kakujya_ t1_ja87iny wrote
Well intelligence isnt very hip these days for some reason despite most everyone being hard up rn.
413mopar t1_ja7vcei wrote
Well , the world will leave them behind. Oh well.
Mammoth-Mud-9609 t1_ja7xz07 wrote
Leaving behind an unsupervised child with a large box of fireworks and some matches is never a good idea.
413mopar t1_ja88n48 wrote
Ah , you have met them also i see.
ChrisARippel t1_ja7mhmh wrote
The linked article describes several ironies.
-
The Dayton, Tennessee high school's biology textbook endorsed evolution as a version of eugenics promoting the superiority of the white race.
-
William Jennings Bryan opposed evolution because of its frequent association to eugenics and Social Darwinism.
kimthealan101 t1_ja87i1n wrote
Eugenics is how you say 'racist' in intellectual society. It is still present in intellectual society. It is easy to subconsciously project your values onto the things you study. Much of what we think about eqyptian mummies and pyramids is based on 18th and 19th century ideas about death in European society.
HPmoni t1_ja8tjls wrote
A lot of people supported eugenics, including black intellectuals.
2022userestmyballs t1_jaa833z wrote
I firmly believe the stupidest people reproduce the fastest and bear all the consequences for that action. Genetic intelligence is separating humans into survival strategy’s imo. The smart reproduce slow and the dumb reproduce fast.
DIABL057 t1_jaafmfd wrote
Idiocracy
kimthealan101 t1_jaet4r6 wrote
That's why it is such a problem. Had the premise been questioned more, some values projected on to others might not be so prevalent in history books.
0ttr t1_ja82bx0 wrote
https://www.thelastarchive.com/season-2/episode-1-monkey-business
You should listen to this podcast...because it adds a very important twist. While I support the teaching of evolution over biblical creation in schools, it's a very important thing to note that AT THAT TIME eugenics and evolution were very tightly entwined, and Scopes taught from a textbook that included it. William Jennings Bryan alluded to this in his defense.
Here's a quote from another link discussing this: "John Scopes admitted to having taught lessons out of George William Hunter’s textbook “A Civic Biology.” If you’ve never read this book, it might shock you. Hunter divided mankind into five races, concluding that the highest race was “the Caucasians, represented by the civilized white inhabitants of Europe and America.” In a different section of the book, he discussed what should be done to people with inferior traits:
“If such people were lower animals, we would probably kill them off to prevent them from spreading. Humanity will not allow this, but we do have the remedy of separating the sexes in asylums or other places and in various ways preventing intermarriage and the possibilities of perpetuating such a low and degenerate race.”
So you can see why religious and moral people might have objections to evolution being taught and where people interpreting the science (and some scientists themselves) had erred here... this kind of thinking, well, you know where it led. https://www.timesnews.net/news/education/the-forgotten-link-between-the-scopes-trial-and-eugenics/article_45390ee2-0448-11ed-96b9-3fd02a64a683.html
popsickle_in_one t1_ja8s28k wrote
Selective breeding was known about long before Darwin proposed his theory of Evolution.
Eugenics merely applies that knowledge to humans. You don't need to know a thing about evolution.
The Nazis you allude to actually rejected evolution as the origin of species.
Understanding evolution shows how eugenics (and indeed selective breeding) is actually bad for the species in question, and doesn't create a super race. (look at how many purebred dogs have genetic deficiencies compared to mongrels)
People could twist their racism to fit a narrative and claim that was evolution. Darwin himself was very much anti-racist though and his theory shows that there isn't a superior breed of humans.
0ttr t1_ja94jlm wrote
However, it was very popular at the time, and no doubt evolution reinforced it and was used as a justification for it, hence the presence of it in a high school biology text. Many, many highly educated people supported eugenic ideas all the way up to US Supreme Court justices. It was not just racism--it was any kind of character or physical flaw.
And of course, the understanding of evolution, in an era prior to understanding gene encoding, chromosomes, and DNA, was considerably less sophisticated than it is now, again, certainly down at the level of a high school text.
You are arguing about what we know now, and what we know in hindsight, and that's fine, but that's not what they "knew" then. Your statements literally contradict the text quoted out of the book used in the case.
Clearly that was not the only reason evolution was being objected to, but it was definitely a reason, and convoluting creationism with the teaching of Christian morality is certainly a mishmash of theology, but it is clashing with a mishmash of science and pseudoscience that was in a mainstream accepted high school biology text at the time.
popsickle_in_one t1_ja9d7u7 wrote
The book is wrong. Evolution from the start discredited eugenics or any notion that there were superior races. How could there be if all types of humans had been evolving for the same amount of time?
People supported eugenics because they were racist, not because the theory of evolution ever taught them it was a good idea. People would have manipulated the ideas to fit racism, but it wasn't the cause, and studying it, even then, would have led to the opposite conclusion that the racists were trying to make.
People already knew about selective breeding, selecting against deformities in people has been present since ancient times. Darwin did not introduce this concept.
Also, the idea that Christian morality stood against eugenics at the time was laughable, since the both the British Eugenics Education Society, and the American Eugenics Society counted top clergymen among their members, and modified their message to appeal to Christians.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4001825/
Meanwhile eugenics was being consistently denounced by biologists and anthropologists, and they were especially concerned with the unscientific ideals eugenicists were spouting in order to propagate their message (such as picking undesirable 'traits' that weren't even biological in nature ie committing crimes)
0ttr t1_ja9g1ix wrote
Well, of course the book is wrong, no one in 2023 is disputing that a book used by a teacher in the 1920s era is wrong!
Clergyman were indeed eugenicists. So were scientists. Bryan was a Christian who was not a eugenicist and made arguments based on those principles, just like some scientist made their arguments for and against. So to argue that science was not tainted by it is blatantly false. Henry F. Osborn was a eugenicist and president of the AMNH https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Fairfield_Osborn. Charles B. Davenport, zoologist, eugenicist. Henry Crampton, president NYAS, major evolutionary biologist, eugenicist. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Crampton
So I think you need to adjust your thinking. The Nazis drew upon American eugenics research because it was so "thorough".
Darkstar1988 t1_ja8nlsx wrote
I highly doubt this was the reason for that. The bible was used to justify slavery and also an instruktonbook on that matter after all, I think this podcast is trying to rewrite history like the Southern states in your country. And religious and moral.... you make me laugh.
SaiyanTheSuper-J t1_ja8ryuj wrote
Not all religious people are dickheads
Darkstar1988 t1_ja8sh06 wrote
True, but in my personal experience witch it is anecdotal ofcourse most are and I mean like 90%
0ttr t1_ja92vxn wrote
Research shows that any group of people that identifies around a common ideology becomes more insular and exclusive over time. That includes religious groups, but atheists as well. It's a human trait. Only individual curiosity and humility overcomes that--again, proven by research.
Darkstar1988 t1_jaagyye wrote
again I accept that but personal experience differs so my emotional state is different. thas all
0ttr t1_ja92ed2 wrote
It was not *the* reason, but it was *a* reason. You can read Bryan's own writings and see it quite clearly. It's in the source notes for the podcast. His moral arguments were quite valid. And in this case, the science on eugenics was wrong.
The lesson to be learned here is: things are almost always more complicated than history makes them out to be, and not everyone was the moron and genius that they seemed to be.
Bursuc23 t1_ja8wsh9 wrote
yeah, but what did they lead with at the time?
0ttr t1_ja931el wrote
It's mixed into Bryan's arguments at the time and in his writings. He has a moral objection that clearly alludes to eugenics.
[deleted] t1_ja7gh9i wrote
[removed]
gutterbrain73 t1_ja81073 wrote
I'd say subby isn't from the USA, because this has been part of school curriculum for decades...
[deleted] t1_jac4u9y wrote
[deleted]
[deleted] t1_ja7g0h3 wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_ja7kief wrote
[removed]
ArOnodrim t1_ja7qxen wrote
Confederacy and education are mutually exclusive.
[deleted] t1_ja7tytg wrote
[removed]
Juggsernaut t1_ja7h4nz wrote
And they're trying to bring back the "good ol' days". Beware brothers and sisters
No-Owl9201 t1_ja7nbfn wrote
There's a whole heap of politicians in our government that are just so ridiculous that you've got wonder why evolution brought us such creatures, creatures so strange they reject the very notion of evolution itself instead having beliefs based on misinterpreting some dusty old books
foo-jitsoo t1_ja7rrjq wrote
Ok, not to be an asshole, but your comment ironically displays a lack of understanding of what evolution actually means in order to make a rather tired and overused joke about rejecting the theory of evolution in favor of a religious explanation for life.
I say this as an atheist and somebody who is probably on "your side" politically - that's dumb.
No-Owl9201 t1_ja7xe30 wrote
I like dumb, and your response made me smile, ta!
foo-jitsoo t1_ja7ze2y wrote
Dumb *can* be funny, and your comment *did* make me exhale thru my nose a bit as I shook my head.
In response to your light-hearted reply, I have change my downvote of your initial comment to an upvote. You are welcome.
No-Owl9201 t1_ja8jcn2 wrote
Thank you for your kind act!!
Sometimes I even downvote myself.
[deleted] t1_ja7xnwb wrote
[removed]
ElfMage83 t1_ja81fv7 wrote
Well, yes. This is taught early in schools.
NotHosaniMubarak t1_ja892r5 wrote
One really nice thing about this sub is that we get to see people learning about stuff.
The Scopes trial is really well known and because people like OP are learning about it now it'll keep being well known. It's like watching knowledge being handed down through the generations.
Antknee2099 t1_ja8lsel wrote
Trials of the Monkey: An Accidental Memoir by Matthew Chapman is an excellent read on the subject. He's a great-great grandson of Charles Darwin. The book is one part historical recollection of the event and one part journey he makes to a more modern-day Dayton, TN.
My family is from Rhea County and many still live in the Dayton area. They still have a "Monkey Days" festival there every summer complete with parade. Lots of bananas. They celebrate it as a victory over evolution and evil.
Bryan College is there, and it's ridiculous. Named for William Bryan, it continues to churn out indoctrinated youth every year. The education you get from the place should be suspect to anyone who is not trying to be a preacher.
Of course not everyone in Dayton are bad; The town is just seriously depressed economically, socially, and intellectually. There are a dozen Daytons in every state, no matter how progressive and blue they are. It should remind us of our shared past, how much still needs to be done for the good of humanity, and just how difficult true ignorance can be to root out and repair.
KuhlThing t1_ja7y6hr wrote
It's really funny that the religious right still elevates "intellectuals" that have no better arguments than "if we came from monkeys, then why is they still monkeys?"
Outrageous-Pause6317 t1_ja80zwu wrote
They should make a movie about that.
thesonsofpoop t1_ja8g9cl wrote
It would make a decent book as well
kimthealan101 t1_ja85q83 wrote
Too bad Jimmy Stewart can't be in it. That would make the movie really great.
browneyedgirl65 t1_ja89evr wrote
The Scopes Monkey Trial. Inherit the Wind (fictionalized). Etc. It was absolutely a sensation at the time. Learned about it in school in the 80s.
CleaveIshallnot t1_ja8boea wrote
I thought Scopes bravely taught this solely for academic reasons & on principle.
But in reality it was funded by a coal magnate to put Dayton "on the map...& drum up business $$"?
Ah well.
All's well that ends well.
GlastonBerry48 t1_ja8fsap wrote
Random Fact.
The Lawyer who defended Scopes in this trial was famous civil lawyer Clarence Darrow, who later went on to defend infamous dipshits Leopold and Loeb
MassholeLiberal56 t1_ja8ozkj wrote
They are still arresting/firing teachers down south to this day. Sherman didn’t wake them up enough I suppose.
Ronnyalpuck t1_ja8ws8w wrote
The trial was deliberately staged in order to attract publicity to the small town of Dayton, Tennessee, where it was held. Scopes was unsure whether he had ever actually taught evolution, but he incriminated himself deliberately so the case could have a defendant.
p38-lightning t1_ja8ytyr wrote
100 years later and it could happen again if Republican Bible thumpers have their way.
iPod3G t1_ja9wzof wrote
This will be Florida in 2025.
ty_kanye_vcool t1_jaab7md wrote
TIL The Japanese Military attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii in December 1941
[deleted] t1_ja7geit wrote
[removed]
Mammoth-Mud-9609 t1_ja7pn6w wrote
The law remained on the books until 1967.
[deleted] t1_ja83z6n wrote
[deleted]
[deleted] t1_ja8479f wrote
[removed]
turkeysandwich1982 t1_ja86uoh wrote
I remember reading the book about it, Summer of the Gods, several years ago, great book by the way, and I remember thinking it was funny that during the trial there were souvenir stands that sprung up around the courthouse with people trying to sell stuffed monkeys and other tat.
whozitwhatzit t1_ja9318n wrote
There's a fantastic brewery there in Dayton called Monkey Town Brewing Company. Always stop by there on my way to Watts Bar lake.
aneeta96 t1_jaa1j83 wrote
This is what they mean when they say Make America Great Again.
GrimJudas t1_ja7i8tn wrote
To be honest he was trying to teach it to the inbreed folks from TN…
The_Munkster t1_ja7j99c wrote
America in general.
clutzyninja t1_ja84ztm wrote
The only surprise about this was that it was so long ago. I'm sure many southern states would still be locking people up for this if they could
Jstrangways t1_ja87hf5 wrote
Did you say John Scopes, a high school teacher from Florida in 2023?
imbarbdwyer t1_ja8cwk0 wrote
Wow, and about 100 years later, Tennessee legislators are passing laws restricting so many freedoms we are losing count.
FarradayL t1_ja9u2y6 wrote
The US was and continues to be a toilet.
[deleted] t1_jaa7eav wrote
[deleted]
Landlubber77 t1_ja7gzfq wrote
His great grandson was just recently arrested for the exact same thing at the same school.
stevetibb2000 t1_ja7k1x7 wrote
Whatttt?
Gorf_the_Magnificent t1_ja7ms2z wrote
This sounds like an urban legend. I can’t find anything about this on Google or Google News and I’m sure it would have grabbed the headlines.
Landlubber77 t1_ja7nlda wrote
It was a joke about Tennessee being regressive.
Gorf_the_Magnificent t1_ja7oow3 wrote
(sigh) I’m an old guy, so perhaps “unfunny jokes” is yet another trend that has passed me by.
Landlubber77 t1_ja7x1jz wrote
Well then you'd hate me because that's all I've got.
[deleted] t1_ja7ymbu wrote
[deleted]
aknabi t1_ja8j61h wrote
Oh that’s soon to be a daily thing again in red states
marcololol t1_ja841ih wrote
This demonstrates the level of intelligence among the American population at this time (low compared to Europe, even though there were some of the same people). We’re still recovering from this beginning
monocromatica t1_ja7m88n wrote
I'm baffled! I thought that the theory of evolution was prohibited in the US to this day! OK OK... just in the bible belt states
kimthealan101 t1_ja8641w wrote
They do teach evolution in TN.
[deleted] t1_ja7i2jb wrote
[removed]
no_step t1_ja7guc1 wrote
Scopes' involvement in the so-called Scopes Monkey Trial came about after the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) announced that it would finance a test case challenging the constitutionality of the Butler Act if it could find a Tennessee teacher who was willing to act as a defendant.
A band of businessmen in Dayton, Tennessee, led by engineer and geologist George Rappleyea, saw this as an opportunity to get publicity for their town, and they approached Scopes.
​
​
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_T._Scopes