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No, I should not !
There isn't one answer which excludes the others.
I believe in the separation of church and state as well as avoiding to discuss religious topic with strangers as you never know who will feel offended.
Yet I am still amazed by the "debate" over evolution which happened in the US in the second half of the 2000's. A small group of people which aim was to force the teaching of the existence of God to students choose to do so under the veil of a pseudo science and it managed to gain a huge media coverage.
It was really chilling for Europeans (and quite a few Americans I'm sure) when President George W. Bush expressed support for the idea of teaching intelligent design. Making secular decisions like choosing, say solar powered technology over wind powered technology should not be made by a guy who needs to refer to his bible for such choices.
I believe that religions have a positive and powerful effect when one needs to make moral choices.
However, I will never try to deduce how a tree grows by making wild parallels with holly scriptures.
At this point, I would like you to read about
Modern Geocentrism. Now I will take the risk of sounding shocking but I do not believe that the book about the story of a nice carpenter whose message was about embracing love for humankind should have been used by NASA when they made their flight plan to go to the moon.
The Bible is a book too important in my eyes to dwell with such technicalities, it focuses on more important issues, like why Buzz Aldrin should neither punch Neil Armstrong while on the moon nor a Russian if he meets one.
Finally, I would like to share with you two quotes, very similar beside the time between them :
[T]he struggles of the Intelligent Design movement are best understood as clamorous and disappointing double failures - rejected by science because they do not fit the facts, and having failed religion because they think too little of GodKenneth Miller born 1948, Roman Catholic
I would say here something that was heard from an ecclesiastic of the most eminent degree: "The intention of the Holy Spirit is to teach us how one goes to heaven, not how the heavens go."Galileo Galilei born 1564, Roman Catholic