The creation or evolution of man has been in debate since as far back as the 19th Century, and still continues to be a debate here and now in the present. Creationism is the belief that man was formed and created by God in God’s image and that God breathed into this being, and that is how the first human came to be. Evolution on the other hand, is a theory in the 19th Century proposed by Charles Darwin, in which the species of the earth have changed and evolved over hundreds and thousands of years under the influence of natural selection. This theory of evolution was first known as Darwinism, and was embraced quickly by many intellectuals, and although it began primarily as a development in natural science, it caused an impact on society, and was accepted by elite economic groups, intellectuals, and educationalists with significant vigor. Although the majority of American people rejected Darwinism, and believed in the creation by God, the fact that there was still a substantial acceptance of Darwinism, with it came the potential for major changes in America. Darwinism played a powerful role in America by bringing with it the classification of humans, effecting immigration in America, all the while being opposed by Fundamental Christians.(Woodworth, 2000) Social Darwinism became popular also, with the theory that individual groups achieve advantage over others as a result of genetic or biological superiority. This gave the Darwin followers the idea that by only allowing the seemingly better species to procreate, this would cause the production of a stronger and more intelligent species. The reasoning was that all humans could not be equal. The belief that humans had evolved from lower forms of life and that they were gradually evolving to higher forms of life, led them to reason that some humans were further evolved than others, which then indicated that some humans were further evolved and would become stronger and more intelligent,