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harvard, Bush & Einstein On 'Intelligent Design'

Jesse James (209.94.216.97) -

www.rael.org u can download the free e-book intelligent desing and others...

harvard, Bush & Einstein On 'Intelligent Design'

Einstein versus Darwin: Intelligent Design or Evolution?

Would you be surprised to know that millions of scientists around the

world do not blindly accept Darwin's THEORY of evolution? Would it

shock you to know that many of these professors and researchers are not

religious, but they embrace the theory of Intelligent Design, which

holds that our intricate universe could not have come about by chance?

Would it blow you away to find that Albert Einstein was one of them?

It is well documented that these famous scientists strongly disagreed

on this important question. It is also well known that they, along with

all credible scientists throughout history, strongly believed that all

theories should be heard, all should be tested, and none should be

ridiculed. This is the only way that science itself can be credible.

Yet many politically active scientists today are desperately

maneuvering to censor any mention of the theory of Intelligent Design

in our schools, textbooks and media. Their accomplices in this blatant

censorship are liberal politicians, atheists, most of the media and the

national teacher's union (the Nation Education Association or NEA).

Darwin's theory is just that - a theory. It has never been proven, and

cannot be proven. But the censors mentioned above want Darwin's THEORY

taught as FACT, and they want no other theories even mentioned.

Einstein is just one of millions of prominent scientists over the years

that have supported the theory of Intelligent Design, but he is perhaps

the best known. In an article in "Science, Philosophy and Religion, A

Symposium," (see LINK below) Einstein said, "Science without religion

is lame. Religion without science is blind."

In the last paragraph of his essay, "The World as I See It," Einstein

wrote, "I am satisfied with the mystery of life's eternity and with a

knowledge, a sense, of the marvelous structure of existence - as well

as the humble attempt to understand even a tiny portion of the Reason

that manifests itself in nature." While Einstein referred to the

Designer as "Reason" rather than "God," his writings make it very clear

that he believed that an intelligent Designer crafted our universe and

all that is within it. On the other hand, Darwin postulated that all

life somehow crawled out of primordial ooze and miraculously became

differentiated as mammals, reptiles, fish, fowl and so on. It seems

that such a far-fetched theory would require much more faith than

simply believing that God did what He said He did in Genesis: He

created everything according to His plan.

On page 293 of his book, "The Origin of the Species," Darwin stated

that his THEORY would ultimately be proven by the fossil record. This

has never happened. If the theory were true, at least some of the

millions of fossils discovered by scientists would have provided a

"missing link", a fossil that was clearly part one species as well as

part another. Although there have been several attempts over the years

to fake evidence to prove Darwin's theory, the "missing link" has never

been found.

Scientists in China have discovered ancient bacteria that cast doubt on

Darwin's theory, and have published papers stating this. One of them,

Jian Yuan Chan, said, "In China, we can criticize Darwin, but we cannot

criticize the government. In the US you can criticize the government,

but you cannot criticize Darwin."

The issue of Intelligent Design came to national attention recently

because of an ongoing debate in Dover, Pennsylvania. The school board in Dover announced a year ago

that high-school biology teachers would inform their students that

other theories existed besides evolution. A New York Times article

states, "A statement is read to biology students asserting that

Darwin's theory 'is not a fact,' urging them 'to keep an open mind' and

pointing them to the seminal book on intelligent design, 'Of Pandas and

People.' Students are allowed to leave class when it is read." Of

course Dover liberals are incensed. They want to hide from the children

the fact that other valid theories are accepted by large portions of

the scientific community. They are not satisfied that students are

allowed to leave class during the short statement. They want the

discussion to be held (if at all) in humanities classes. Of course this

would send a clear signal to students that the theory is unscientific;

otherwise, why would it not be discussed in science classes?

It should be noted that many proponents of Intelligent Design are not

religious; they are simply intellectually honest scientists who see the

flaws in evolutionary theory. Without calling the Designer "God", they

recognize that the complex organisms that populate our universe could

not have resulted from anything other than systematic design by an

intelligent being. Unfortunately, these scientists are hounded by their

evolutionist peers, often losing their jobs because of their beliefs.

Scientists who would censor or intimidate others with differing

theories are not worthy of the title "Scientist." A Wall Street Journal

Editorial recently exposed the decades-long

persecution of scientists who support the theory of Intelligent Design

(ID). It used as an example a scientist at the Smithsonian's National

Museum of Natural History in Washington, Richard Steinberg. Steinberg,

who holds two PhD's in biology, was the editor of a Museum publication

that printed an article on ID which had been reviewed by scientific

peers prior to publication. He was demoted and a concerted effort is

underway to ruin his career.

Steinberg's immediate supervisor was asked by top Museum officials, "Is

he religious?", as if being religious was something of which he should

be ashamed. "Is he a right-wing conservative?" One's political beliefs

should not be an issue in the scientific community. But since the great

majority of faculty members at US universities are far-left liberals,

it is always an issue. The Editorial concludes, "Darwinism.is an

essential ingredient in secularism, that aggressive, quasi-religious

faith without a deity. The Sternberg case seems, in many ways, an

instance of one religion persecuting a rival, demanding loyalty from

anyone who enters one of its churches - like the National Museum of

Natural History."

The Journal Editor got it right. Darwinism stems from dialectical

materialism, the philosophy of Marxism. Communism/socialism is a

religion that demands blind faith and obedience. Darwinism is an

offshoot of that false religion. It, too, demands blind faith, and its

disciples persecute anyone who believes differently.

Our children deserve better than being brainwashed by their schools

into believing a false religion is based on fact. They deserve to be

told that evolution is nothing more than a theory that has never been

proven, and allowed to consider alternatives to that theory.

Harvard Jumps Into Evolution Debate

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Harvard University is joining the long-running debate

over the theory of evolution by launching a research project to study how

life began.

The team of researchers will receive $1 million in funding annually from

Harvard over the next few years. The project begins with an admission that

some mysteries about life's origins cannot be explained.

"My expectation is that we will be able to reduce this to a very simple

series of logical events that could have taken place with no divine

intervention," said David R. Liu, a professor of chemistry and chemical

biology at Harvard.

The "Origins of Life in the Universe Initiative" is still in its early

stages, scientists told the Boston Sunday Globe. Harvard has told the

research team to make plans for adding faculty members and a collection of

multimillion-dollar facilities.

Evolution is a fundamental scientific theory that species evolved over

millions of years. It has been standard in most public school science

texts for decades but recently re-emerged in the spotlight as communities

and some states debated whether school children should also be taught

about creationism or intelligent design.

The theory of intelligent design says life on earth is too complex to have

developed through evolution, implying that a higher power must have had a

hand in creation.

Harvard has not been seen as a leader in origins of life research, but the

university's vast resources could change that perception.

"It is quite gratifying to see Harvard is going for a solution to a

problem that will be remembered 100 years from now," said Steven Benner, a

University of Florida scientist who is one of the world's top chemists in

origins-of-life research.

Bush Remarks On 'Intelligent Design' Theory Fuel Debate

President Bush invigorated proponents of teaching alternatives to evolution

in public schools with remarks saying that schoolchildren should be taught

about "intelligent design," a view of creation that challenges established

scientific thinking and promotes the idea that an unseen force is behind

the development of humanity.

Although he said that curriculum decisions should be made by school

districts rather than the federal government, Bush told Texas newspaper

reporters in a group interview at the White House on Monday that he

believes that intelligent design should be taught alongside evolution as

competing theories.

"Both sides ought to be properly taught . . . so people can understand what

the debate is about," he said, according to an official transcript of the

session. Bush added: "Part of education is to expose people to different

schools of thought. . . . You're asking me whether or not people ought to

be exposed to different ideas, and the answer is yes."

These comments drew sharp criticism yesterday from opponents of the theory,

who said there is no scientific evidence to support it and no educational

basis for teaching it.

Much of the scientific establishment says that intelligent design is not a

tested scientific theory but a cleverly marketed effort to introduce

religious -- especially Christian -- thinking to students. Opponents say

that church groups and other interest groups are pursuing political

channels instead of first building support through traditional scientific

review.

The White House said yesterday that Bush's comments were in keeping with

positions dating to his Texas governorship, but aides say they could not

recall him addressing the issue before as president. His remarks heartened

conservatives who have been asking school boards and legislatures to teach

students that there are gaps in evolutionary theory and explain that life's

complexity is evidence of a guiding hand.

"With the president endorsing it, at the very least it makes Americans who

have that position more respectable, for lack of a better phrase," said

Gary L. Bauer, a Christian conservative leader who ran for president

against Bush in the 2000 Republican primaries. "It's not some backwater

view. It's a view held by the majority of Americans."

John G. West, an executive with the Discovery Institute, a Seattle-based

think tank supporting intelligent design, issued a written statement

welcoming Bush's remarks. "President Bush is to be commended for defending

free speech on evolution, and supporting the right of students to hear

about different scientific views about evolution," he said.

Opponents of intelligent design, which a Kansas professor once called

"creationism in a cheap tuxedo," say there is no legitimate debate. They

see the case increasingly as a political battle that threatens to weaken

science teaching in a nation whose students already are lagging.

"It is, of course, further indication that a fundamentalist right has

really taken over much of the Republican Party," said Rep. Barney Frank

(D-Mass.), a leading liberal lawmaker. Noting Bush's Ivy League education,

Frank said, "People might cite George Bush as proof that you can be totally

impervious to the effects of Harvard and Yale education."

Bush's comments were "irresponsible," said Barry W. Lynn, executive

director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. He said

the president, by suggesting that students hear two viewpoints, "doesn't

understand that one is a religious viewpoint and one is a scientific

viewpoint." Lynn said Bush showed a "low level of understanding of

science," adding that he worries that Bush's comments could be followed by

a directive to the Justice Department to support legal efforts to change

curricula.

Bush gave no sign that he intended to wade that far into the debate. The

issue came up only when a reporter from the Knight Ridder news service

asked him about it; participants said the president did not seem especially

eager to be asked. "Very interesting question," he told the reporter playfully.

At a morning briefing yesterday, White House press secretary Scott

McClellan said Bush was simply restating long-standing views. "He has said

that going back to his days as governor," McClellan said. "I think he also

said in those remarks that local school districts should make the decisions

about their curriculum. But it's long been his belief that students ought

to be exposed to different ideas, and so that's what he was reiterating

yesterday."

In comments published last year in Science magazine, Bush said that the

federal government should not tell states or school boards what to teach

but that "scientific critiques of any theory should be a normal part of the

science curriculum."

The president's latest remarks came less than two months after Cardinal

Christoph Schonborn, archbishop of Vienna and an influential Roman Catholic

theologian, said evolution as "an unguided, unplanned process of random

variation and natural selection" is not true.

"Any system of thought that denies or seeks to explain away the

overwhelming evidence for design in biology is ideology, not science,"

Schonborn wrote in the New York Times. He said he wanted to correct the

idea that neo-Darwinism is compatible with Christian faith.

Bruce Alberts, president of the National Academy of Sciences, warned this

year in a "Dear Colleagues" letter of "increasingly strident attempts to

limit the teaching of evolution."

The most prominent debate is underway in Kansas, where the conservative

state board of education is expected to require the teaching of doubts

about evolution to public high school students. A challenge to the teaching

of intelligent design is scheduled for trial in Dover, Pa., while a federal

court in Georgia said textbook stickers questioning evolution were

unconstitutional.

HUMAN SCIENTISTS FROM ANOTHER PLANET CREATED ALL LIFE ON EARTH USING DNA.

Traces of this epic masterpiece of creation can be found in all religious writings and traditions. It is to them that Moses, Jesus, Buddha and Mohammed referred. It is now time to welcome them.

WHAT HAPPENED?

On the 13th of December 1973, French journalist Rael was contacted by a visitor from another planet, and asked to establish an Embassy to welcome these people back to Earth.

The extra-terrestrial human being was a little over four feet tall, had long dark hair, almond shaped eyes, olive skin, and exuded harmony and humor. Rael recently described him by saying quite simply, "If he were to walk down a street in Japan, he would not even be noticed." In other words, they look like us, and we look like them. In fact, we were created "in their image" as explained in the Bible.

He told Rael that:

"We were the ones who designed all life on earth"

"You mistook us for gods"

"We were at the origin of your main religions"

"Now that you are mature enough to understand this,we would like to enter official contact through an embassy"

THE MESSAGES

The messages dictated to Rael explain that life on Earth is not the result of random evolution, nor the work of a supernatural 'God'. It is a deliberate creation, using DNA, by a scientifically advanced people who made human beings literally "in their image" -- what one can call "scientific creationism." References to these scientists and their work, as well as to their symbol of infinity, can be found in the ancient texts of many cultures. For example, in Genesis, the Biblical account of Creation, the word "Elohim" has been mistranslated as the singular word "God", but it is actually a plural word which means "those who came from the sky", and the singular is "Eloha" (also known as "Allah"). Indigenous cultures all over the world remember these "gods" who came from the sky, including natives of Africa (Dogon, Twa, etc.), America, Asia, Australia, and Europe.

Leaving our humanity to progress by itself, the Elohim nevertheless maintained contact with us via prophets including Buddha, Moses, Mohammed, etc., all specially chosen and educated by them. The role of the prophets was to progressively educate humanity through the Messages they taught, each adapted to the culture and level of understanding at the time. They were also to leave traces of the Elohim so that we would be able to recognize them as our Creators and fellow human beings when we had advanced enough scientifically to understand them. Jesus, whose father was an Eloha, was given the task of spreading these messages throughout the world in preparation for this crucial time in which we are now privileged to live: the predicted Age Of Revelation.

And most important of all, read the book, "Intelligent Design - Message from the Designers" the book which will revolutionize your thinking, transform your life and which is already changing the world.

for more information vist www.rael.org and u can download the free e-books intelegent desing and others

Thank you for reading love Jesse James


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