Scope trial (July 10-21, 1925, Dayton, Tennessee, USA), a very open trial of John T. Scope, a high school teacher in Dayton, Tennessee. The evolutionary theory to make Professor Charles Darwin In March 1925, the Tennessee State Assembly declared that any doctrine denied God's creation doctrine taught by the Bible as illegal. The world's attention is focused on the trial process which promises confrontation between fundamentalist faith and biblical liberal interpretation. William Jennings Brian led the prosecution, Clarence Darrow served. The judge excluded any examination of the constitutionality of the law or the validity of the argument and confined the case to John T. Scopes whether it taught a single evolution theory, he acknowledged. He was convicted and fined $ 100. Upon appeal, the State Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the law in 1925, ignoring the technical nature of the range, he was fined excessively. The law was abolished in 1967
Range Trial, also known as Range Monkey Trial, was the prosecution of a science teacher, John Scotts, developed from the Tennessee Public School in 1925, and recent bills were illegal. The trial was based on two most famous lecturers at the time, William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow. The trial challenged the constitutionality of the bill, publicly insisted on the validity of Darwin's theory of evolution, and was seen as increasing the image of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
Formally known as Range Monkey Trial Tennessee v. John Thomas Range officially known Scope Trial is an American lawsuit accused of one substitute high school teacher in July 1925 violating Tennessee Butler It was. It states that schools operated by state funds teach that human evolution is illegal. The trial was deliberately done to attract publicity in the town of Dayton, Tennessee. The scope is uncertain, did he actually teach evolution theory? But he deliberately condemns himself so that the incident can have defendant
A few months after the first trial by Carrie in 1925, when the teacher John Scopes of Tennessee tried to evolve education in 1960, the country was fascinated by the famous "monkey" trial. The drama of that year (based on the 1955 drama) inherited the wind. What he remembers now is that the heroic struggle of science for superstition is also a debate for clear eugenic biology textbooks. The range uses George Hunter's A Civic Biology, which includes a passage to promote eugenics.