A campaign has succeeded in its aims to remove references to evolution, including the avian ancestor Archaeopteryx, from high-school textbooks
June 5, 2012?|
?|Image: Klaus Honal/Naturfoto Honal/CORBIS
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From Nature magazine
Mention creationism, and many scientists think of the United States, where efforts to limit the teaching of evolution have made headway in a couple of states. But the successes are modest compared with those in South Korea, where the anti-evolution sentiment seems to be winning its battle with mainstream science.
A petition to remove references to evolution from high-school textbooks claimed victory last month after the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST) revealed that many of the publishers would produce revised editions that exclude examples of the evolution of the horse or of avian ancestor Archaeopteryx. The move has alarmed biologists, who say that they were not consulted. ?The ministry just sent the petition out to the publishing companies and let them judge,? says Dayk Jang, an evolutionary scientist at Seoul National University.
The campaign was led by the Society for Textbook Revise (STR), which aims to delete the ?error? of evolution from textbooks to ?correct? students? views of the world, according to the society?s website. The society says that its members include professors of biology and high-school science teachers.
The STR is also campaigning to remove content about ?the evolution of humans? and ?the adaptation of finch beaks based on habitat and mode of sustenance?, a reference to one of the most famous observations in Charles Darwin?s On the Origin of Species. To back its campaign, the group highlights recent discoveries that Archaeopteryx is one of many feathered dinosaurs, and not necessarily an ancestor of all birds2. Exploiting such debates over the lineage of species ?is a typical strategy of creation scientists to attack the teaching of evolution itself?, says Joonghwan Jeon, an evolutionary psychologist at Kyung Hee University in Yongin.
The STR is an independent offshoot of the Korea Association for Creation Research (KACR), according to KACR spokesman Jungyeol Han. Thanks in part to the KACR?s efforts, creation science ? which seeks to provide evidence in support of the creation myth described in the Book of Genesis ? has had a growing influence in South Korea, although the STR itself has distanced itself from such doctrines. In early 2008, the KACR scored a hit with a successful exhibition at Seoul Land, one of the country?s leading amusement parks. According to the group, the exhibition attracted more than 116,000 visitors in three months, and the park is now in talks to create a year-long exhibition.
Even the nation?s leading science institute ? the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology ? has a creation science display on campus. ?The exhibition was set up by scientists who believed in creation science back in 1993,? says Gab-duk Jang, a pastor of the campus church. The institute also has a thriving Research Association for Creation Science, run by professors and students, he adds.
Antipathy to evolution
In a 2009 survey conducted for the South Korean documentary The Era of God and Darwin, almost one-third of the respondents didn?t believe in evolution. Of those, 41% said that there was insufficient scientific evidence to support it; 39% said that it contradicted their religious beliefs; and 17% did not understand the theory. The numbers approach those in the United States, where a survey by the research firm Gallup has shown that around 40% of Americans do not believe that humans evolved from less advanced forms of life.
The roots of the South Korean antipathy to evolution are unclear, although Jeon suggests that they are partly ?due to strong Christianity in the country?. About half of South Korea?s citizens practice a religion, mostly split between Christianity and Buddhism.
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