Freethought Almanac

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October 24: Eugenie Scott (1945)

Eugenie_ScottIt was on this date, October 24, 1945, that “one of the strongest voices challenging the teaching of young earth creationism and intelligent design in schools” American physical anthropologist Eugenie Scott was born. Scott grew up in Wisconsin, earned her BS and MS from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and her PhD from the University of Missouri. She also holds nine honorary degrees. She joined the University of Kentucky as a physical anthropologist in 1974 and was Executive Director of the National Center for Science Education (NCSE) from 1987-2014.

 

It was at Kentucky U. that she first became interested in the creation-evolution “controversy” when she heard her mentor, James A. Gavan, debate the young earth creationist Duane T. Gish (d. 2013). By 1980, she had become a leading critic of young earth creationism and intelligent design and stood at the forefront of the drive to keep the pseudoscience of creationism/intelligent design out of public school science classrooms. In 2004, she published Evolution Vs. Creationism: An Introduction and in 2006 was co-editor, with Glenn Branch, of Not in Our Classrooms: Why Intelligent Design Is Wrong for Our Schools. Scott became the first-ever recipient of the Stephen Jay Gould Prize from the Society for the Study of Evolution in 2009, being cited for devoting “her life to advancing public understanding of evolution.”

 

Scott joined the National Advisory Council of Americans United for Separation of Church and State and served on the National Advisory Council of Americans for Religious Liberty. In 1999 Scott was awarded the Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award "for tirelessly defending the separation of church and state by ensuring that religious neutrality is maintained in the science curriculum of America's public schools."

 

Brought up in Christian Science by her mother and grandmother, Scott now designates herself a nontheist and is a signatory to the third Humanist Manifesto. Both Scott and the NCSE are criticized by creationist groups as being “atheistic” for simply being religiously neutral and promoting science over design. Scott jokes that she is so often referred to as “Atheist Eugenie Scott” by creationists, she sometimes thinks her first name is “Atheist.”

Ronald Bruce Meyer

Our Fearless Leader.


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July 4: Nathaniel Hawthorne

Hawthorne never bothered to attend church as an adult and one biographer observes that, "His own family did not know what his opinions were."



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