Sort Quotes - page 84
[The] Third (problem with Darwinism), which I think is overwhelming, and just sort of blows the whole theory of Random Mutation out of the water, is, at least, let me say, raises big questions, that is. Assuming it all did happen by Random Mutation and Natural Selection, where did the laws of gravity come from. Where did the laws of thermodynamics come from? Where did the laws of motion and, of heat come from? Where, I guess that's the same as thermodynamics. Where did all these laws, that make it possible for the universe to function, where did they all come from? Why isn't all just chaos and everything collapsing in on itself and killing everything?
Ben Stein
I think we went through - in America, at least, we went through a period in the '60s and '70s when the education establishment became extremely liberal, and part of that is a flirtation with relativism. And a resistance - it's horrible to think of - of adults telling kids what's right and wrong. What a terrible thing. That's oppression. And so we created these sort of value-free spaces, which conveys a value, which is that there's no right or wrong, everyone decides for themselves. Uh, everyone's opinion is equal. You should say your opinion and then you get a lot of incivility. What I would like to see is a revamped civics curriculum where we teach very explicitly the long tradition of left-right. Um, we teach what each side is. You can't say right about it, that's my language. But, um, you teach what each side is concerned about. You know, very much like the line here. Uh, both are essential. One without the other creates an unbalanced American civic order.
Jonathan Haidt