# Science, Religion and the Teaching of Evolution

**Authors:** P.C. Hohenberg

arXiv: 1704.03023 · 2017-04-12

## TL;DR

This paper examines the debate between science and religion, focusing on intelligent design and the nonoverlapping magisteria concept, highlighting ongoing conflicts and philosophical perspectives.

## Contribution

It defends Gould's NOMA thesis and analyzes recent controversies over teaching intelligent design in science education.

## Key findings

- Supports the nonoverlapping magisteria framework
- Critiques the exclusion of intelligent design from science classrooms
- Highlights the philosophical and legal debates surrounding science and religion

## Abstract

This essay discusses the relationship between science and religion, specifically the controversy elicited by an article by the philosopher Thomas Nagel, criticizing the scientific establishment for ruling out intelligent design as beyond discussion. He also criticizes the judge's decision in Kitzmiller vs. Dover, ruling out discussion of intelligent design in science classrooms in public schools. A defense of the thesis of Stephen J. Gould that science and religion represent nonoverlapping magesteria (NOMA) is presented.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.03023