
Reviews
If only Scopes were obscure historicism. Instead, its continued relevance is painfully clear in this superb book. Most striking is how the very things that make science vibrant and essential—debates about interpretations of findings, evolving pictures of factual details—are weaponized by those who throttle free thought and truth.
Great scientific advances confront heartfelt religious faith from Darwin's time through the Scopes 'monkey' trial to today's eerily similar (and equally needless) battles. Two friends, brilliant progressive lawyers, clash in court over teaching evolution, with echoes down to us in a fraught legacy. An elegant saga of science and law.
The Hundred Years' Trial is an intriguing account of an important event in the history of science in America: the freedom to teach evolution, the unifying core of biological science. Its publication is timely, for science as a way to distinguish truth from fiction has never been more important than it is now.
Book Details
Preface
Introduction
1. An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles
2. One Long Argument Interrupted
3. Survival
4. The Toilers Everywhere
5. Divergence
6. A Magnificent Opportunity to Test an Obnoxious Law
7
Preface
Introduction
1. An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles
2. One Long Argument Interrupted
3. Survival
4. The Toilers Everywhere
5. Divergence
6. A Magnificent Opportunity to Test an Obnoxious Law
7. Evolution in the Courtroom
8. Conviction
9. Synthesis, Resurrection, and the Shadow of Scopes
10. Eugenics, Depression, and the Road to War
11. The Midcentury Moment
12. Lemon and Peppered Moths
13. A Punctured Synthesis
14. Crusades Begin
15. Backlash and Unraveling
16. The End of Lemon and Calls to Revisit the Synthesis
Conclusion