Late last month, Rick Brattin, a Republican state representative in Missouri, introduced a bill that would require that intelligent design and ‘destiny’ get the same educational treatment and textbook space in Missouri schools as the theory of evolution. Brattin insists that his bill has nothing to do with religion-it’s all in the name of science.

‘I’m a science enthusiast…I’m a huge science buff,’ Brattin tells The Riverfront Times. ‘This [bill] is about testable data in today’s world.’ But Eric Meikle, education project director at the National Center for Science Education, disagrees. ‘This bill is very idiosyncratic and strange,’ he tells Mother Jones. ‘And there is simply not scientific evidence for intelligence design.’

HB 291, the ‘Missouri Standard Science Act,’ redefines a few things you thought you already knew about science. For example, a ‘hypothesis’ is redefined as something that reflects a ‘minority of scientific opinion and is ‘philosophically unpopular.’ A scientific theory is ‘an inferred explanation…whose components are data, logic and faith-based philosophy.’ And ‘destiny’ is not something that $5 fortune tellers believe in; Instead, it’s ‘the events and processes that define the future of the universe, galaxies, stars, our solar system, earth, plant life, animal life, and the human race.’

The bill […]

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