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ken miller (the scientist of the week, part 3)

Written on October 28, 2009

kenmiller1

i was raised in an atheist jewish household in two of the biggest (and most liberal) cities in the country. my brother and i never even went to hebrew school. i like to say that we’re more jew-ish than jewish. we love matzo ball soup. we’re expert complainers. but no bar mitzvahs. i have no idea when passover is, no idea if yom kippur happens before rosh hashonah, or which days you get to take off of school. we never went to temple, though there was a temple across the street from our house. my brother, genius that he was, discovered that there was a day camp in the temple where they had arcade games that didn’t require quarters. we snuck in one day, barely making it through one game of pac man before the rabbis discovered us and kicked us out. that was pretty much the extent of our exposure to religion. we tried hannukah one year, but the family collectively decided that doing anything for eight days straight was way too much of a pain in the ass. worrier that i was, i felt that candles were a fire hazard. we mostly celebrated christmas as it was over in one day and everything else was closed, anyway.

as someone who was raised in an environment where nobody at all was religious, where reason and responsibility were valued, it was very shocking to me to encounter religious america as i got older.

ken miller is a professor at brown university, and gained some amount of fame as a key witness in the dover school  board intelligent design trial. he was an especially damning witness against the creationists as he actually wrote the evolution textbook that they were trying to ban. on top of that he is a roman catholic.

ken lectures often to conferences and has been very involved with the promotion of science in education. he’s a great speaker, very funny and very smart. he’s all over youtube, one example of which is embedded below. i’m a total geek for these kinds of videos. i find them fascinating and can watch them all day.

find out more about the dover school board trial here.

see books by ken miller here.

FAQs about evolution here at the national center for science education.

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2 Comments

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  1. Comment by Angelique:

    Hey, thanks for posting! Totally fascinating. I just watched the whole lecture on YouTube. I love science. Ken is a great lecturer, very funny. Do you know if he’s lecturing in town any time soon?

    October 31, 2009 @ 3:46 pm
  2. Comment by Grace:

    ken miller is my hero. oh, yeah…. you too max.

    November 2, 2009 @ 5:52 pm
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