Scope trial In March 1925 Tennessee passed the first national law and criminalized the teachings of evolution theory. The Legislature passed a law prohibiting teaching public schools of human theories developed from low-level living forms, not Adam and Eve. The American Civil Liberties Union promised to immediately protect teachers who disagree with the law. John T. Scopes, a biological teacher of Dayton, was arrested for violating the law and he volunteered to participate in the test case. In his biological class, Scopes read this article on Civic Biology. "We now know that animal shapes can begin in the form of a single cell and can be arranged to end in a group containing m.
Scope trial formally known as Tennessee v. John Thomas Range formally known as Range Monkey Trial is a US lawsuit in July 1925, where an alternate high school teacher, John T. Scope, is in Ben Tennessee Bert He was accused of breaching. This law stipulates that the evolution of mankind is illegal in state-funded schools. This trial was deliberately done to attract publicity in the town of Dayton, Tennessee. The scope is uncertain, he actually taught the theory of evolution, but he deliberately condemns himself and allows the incident to have a defendant
Range Trial, also known as Range Monkey Trial, was a lawsuit filed in 1925 by John Scotts, a science teacher developed from the Tennessee Public School that was illegal in recent bills. This trial was based on the two most famous lecturers at the time, William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow. The trial was seen as challenging the constitutionality of the bill while publicly advocating the validity of Darwin's theory of evolution and the opportunity to advertise the image of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
John T. Scope's public trial (known as "Monkey Trial"), a high school teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, Scope trial (July 10-21, 1925, Dayton, Tennessee, USA) infringed the province Professor Charles Darwin's Declaration as Depressed as Professor Charles Darwin In March 1925, the Tennessee State Assembly declared that any doctrine denied denying God's creation doctrine taught by the Bible. The world's attention is focused on the trial process which promises a confrontation between fundamentalist faith and biblical liberal interpretation. William Jennings Brian led the prosecution, Clarence Darrow served. The judge eliminated the test of the constitutional or theoretical validity of the law and limited the experiment to John T. Scopes whether it taught a single evolution theory, he acknowledged. He was convicted and fined $ 100. The law was abolished in 1967