What did the Great Oxford Debate demonstrate about the relationship between science and religion?

a) New scientific ideas do not always prevail through logical argument.
b) The British clergy found common ground with Charles Darwin and Thomas Huxley.
Consider This: What did Bishop Wilberforce say to Thomas Huxley? See 9.7: Narrative: A Monkey’s Uncle.
c) The government of England did not care what the clergy or scientists believed.
Consider This: What did Bishop Wilberforce say to Thomas Huxley? See 9.7: Narrative: A Monkey’s Uncle.
d) Science inevitably leads to atheism.
Consider This: What did Bishop Wilberforce say to Thomas Huxley? See 9.7: Narrative: A Monkey’s Uncle.


a) New scientific ideas do not always prevail through logical argument.

History

You might also like to view...

In the Mesopotamian civilization the temple administration functioned in each of the following ways except

a. collecting rents. b. providing employment for most of the city workers. c. providing an armory where weapons could be stored. d. employing scribes that kept city records. e. operating businesses.

History

What would result from U.S. expansion as described by the phrase "free development" used by John O'Sullivan?

a. the establishment of an educational system b. the breakdown of the white American cultural dominance c. free trade and commerce without government intervention d. the spread of democratic institutions

History

The Roman Republic met its first great challenge when it collided with the

a. Ptolemies in Egypt. b. Seleucids in Syria. c. Carthaginians in North Africa. d. Antigonids in Macedonia. e. Phoenicians in Lebanon.

History

In the late 1800s, farm families in the trans-Mississippi West became less dependent on loans as they were able to purchase land, machinery, and industrial products despite the prices for agricultural goods in the world market.

a. true b. false

History