>I'd be REALLY interested to see what the poll numbers are from other
>countries. Canada, UK, Australia, Germany, China and on.
>
>On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 5:22 PM, Jim Davis <[email protected]>wrote:
>
Its a bit old, but I think the accompanying charts to this article are real 
scary. Of the 36 countries studied, only Turkey had a larger percentage of 
people who do not accept evolution.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/08/060810-evolution.html

and you can see and detail the actual data set here:
http://www.data360.org/dsg.aspx?Data_Set_Group_Id=507

Evolution Less Accepted in U.S. Than Other Western Countries, Study Finds
James Owen
for National Geographic News
August 10, 2006
 
People in the United States are much less likely to accept Darwin's idea that 
humans and apes share a common ancestor than adults in other Western nations, a 
number of surveys show.

A new study of those surveys suggests that the main reason for this lies in a 
unique confluence of religion, politics, and the public understanding of 
biological science in the United States.

Researchers compared the results of past surveys of attitudes toward evolution 
taken in the U.S. since 1985 and similar surveys in Japan and 32 European 
countries.

In the U.S., only 14 percent of adults thought that evolution was "definitely 
true," while about a third firmly rejected the idea.

In European countries, including Denmark, Sweden, and France, more than 80 
percent of adults surveyed said they accepted the concept of evolution.

The proportion of western European adults who believed the theory "absolutely 
false" ranged from 7 percent in Great Britain to 15 percent in the Netherlands.

The only country included in the study where adults were more likely than 
Americans to reject evolution was Turkey.

The investigation also showed that the percentage of U.S. adults who are 
uncertain about evolution has risen from 7 percent to 21 percent in the past 20 
years.

Researchers from the U.S. and Japan analyzed additional information from these 
surveys in an attempt to identify factors that might help explain why Americans 
are more skeptical about evolution.

Led by Jon D. Miller, a political scientist at Michigan State University, the 
team reports its findings in tomorrow's issue of the journal Science.

American Culture and Evolution

The team ran a complex analysis of the statistics, testing for a causal link 
between aspects of U.S. culture and Americans' attitudes toward evolution..

The study identified three key influences on Americans.

First, the researchers found that the effect of fundamentalist religious belief 
on opinions of evolution was almost twice as much in the U.S. as in Europe.

Miller says the U.S. has a tradition of Protestant fundamentalism not found in 
Europe that takes the Bible literally and sees the Book of Genesis as an 
accurate account of the creation of human life.

After European Protestants broke off from the Roman Catholic Church in the 16th 
century, they retained a hierarchy that remained part of the university system, 
Miller says.

"In the United States, partly because of our frontier history, most of the 
Protestant churches are congregational—they don't belong to any hierarchy," 
he added.

"They're free to choose their own ministers and espouse their own beliefs."

That freedom also included the creation of their own Bible colleges for 
training ministers, Miller says.

"If you send them to a Bible college that teaches only the Bible, they'll come 
back preaching only the Bible," he added.

"There are very few European counterparts to that."

(Read a National Geographic magazine feature on the evolution of evolution 
theory in the United States, "Was Darwin Wrong?")

European Attitudes

Second, the researchers tested whether an American's political views influenced 
his or her view of evolution theory.

The team found that individuals with anti-abortion, pro-life views associated 
with the conservative wing of the Republican Party were significantly more 
likely to reject evolution than people with pro-choice views.

The team adds that in Europe having pro-life or right-wing political views had 
little correlation with a person's attitude toward evolution.

The researchers say this reflects the politicization of the evolution issue in 
the U.S. "in a manner never seen in Europe or Japan."

"In the second half of the 20th century, the conservative wing of the 
Republican Party has adopted creationism as part of a platform designed to 
consolidate their support in Southern and Midwestern states," the study authors 
write.

Miller says that when Ronald Reagan was running for President of the U.S., for 
example, he gave speeches in these states where he would slip in the sentence, 
"I have no chimpanzees in my family," poking fun at the idea that apes could be 
the ancestors of humans.

When such a view comes from the U.S. President or other prominent political 
figures, Miller says, it "lends a degree of legitimacy to the dispute."

A Natural Selection?

Third, the study found that adults with some understanding of genetics are more 
likely to have a positive attitude toward evolution.

But, the authors say, studies in the U.S. suggest substantial numbers of 
American adults are confused about some core ideas related to 20th- and 
21st-century biology.

The researchers cite a 2005 study finding that 78 percent of adults agreed that 
plants and animals had evolved from other organisms. In the same study, 62 
percent also believed that God created humans without any evolutionary 
development.

Fewer than half of American adults can provide a minimal definition of DNA, the 
authors add.

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