TALLAHASSEE, Florida (Reuters) – Florida education officials voted on Tuesday to add evolution to required course work in public schools but only after a last-minute change depicting Charles Darwin’s seminal work as merely a theory. Bending to pressure from religious conservatives, the State Board of Education on a 4-3 vote included the ‘theory’ language as part of a retooling of the state’s science standards for public school education. The compromise would require teaching that Darwin’s proposal — that natural selection has driven the evolution of many species from a few common ancestors over billions of years — has yet to be conclusively proven. ‘To say there is no debate is ridiculous,’ said board member Phoebe Raulerson. ‘Then why are we here today?’ The panel includes the word ‘evolution’ in state science standards for the first time, but it is relegated to a place among a host of ideas, including Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity. By contrast Isaac Newton’s law of gravity is taught as undisputed fact. During more than two hours of testimony, scientists and religious representatives argued over whether teaching that humans evolved from a single-celled species over hundreds of millions of years should […]

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