The institute, an autonomous body set up by the Union Ministry of Human Resource Development, said the question was not meant for "opening debate" on the minister's statement, but to test "logical thinking of students".
"The minister of state for Human Resource Development [MHRD] in India recently claimed that the Darwinian theory of evolution is wrong because 'Nobody, including our ancestors, in writing or orally, has said they saw an ape turning into a man'. What is wrong with this argument?" read the question.
"The students are supposed to think and provide logical reasoning, and the question, which was posed during the exam, was quite straightforward and was aimed at testing logical thinking of the students," said Sanjeev Galande, Dean of Research and Development, IISER.
"This is not that we are opening a debate (over the statement made by the minister) but it is theoretical exercise to make the students do logical arguments and (test) how they can answer in a different way," Galande said.
Singh, the Minister of State for the Human Resource Development, had last month claimed that the Darwin's theory of evolution of man was "scientifically wrong", and it should not be part of school and college curriculum.
"Darwin's theory is scientifically wrong. It needs to change in school and college curriculum. Since man is seen on Earth he has always been man. Nobody, including our ancestors, in written or orally, have said they saw an ape turning into a man," he had said.
Incidentally, the question in the February 22 examination at the IISER was accompanied by a note: "This question is NOT asking why biologists believe evolution to be correct. It is asking why the quoted argument cannot be correct in terms of disproving the Darwinian theory of evolution.
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