Ivellious the problem with college courses and macroevolution is that they teach it biology classrooms as science when it is more of a faith based teaching. This is indoctrination at it's finest. Macroevolution is religion and you know it.
Well, to be fair, there are plenty of public schools you can go to that don't teach evolution (or not much anyway). If you don't like what the scientific consensus is, then you can avoid it. No one is forcing you to go to a secular school as a biology major.
Again as many others have said already, it completely depends on what you define evolution as.
Macro-evolution is about as science based as Buddhism.
I find it curious that you identify as a theistic evolutionist but reject macroevolution. Care to explain your rejection of evolution in that context? It would be easier to defend my point if you explained your position.
Micro-evolution, I suppose can be taught in schools as it is technically provable science, but the term should be redefined as micro-variation because it is essentially just a variation between species of the same kind.
In scientific/biological definitions, you are wrong. Evolution is, in the strictest sense, the change in allele/gene frequency in a population over time. That is perfectly consistent with how it is taught. Variation is the fact that different species within a population have different features and genetic makeup. Evolution is a process, variation is a description of differences in individuals.
For example, a dog will produce a dog. Maybe the dog will be a different colour or will have a different type of skin, but it will still be a dog.
But what if, over hundreds or thousands of generations, each consecutive set of changes in variation caused the population to look and act more like cats? If their noses shortened, their ears became pointed, their eyes became more adept at night, their joints became more flexible, etc...No, evolution does not suggest that a fly will give birth to a fully formed scorpion, or that a dog will give birth to a donkey. That's absurd. Your example sounds logical, but it's falsely representing the concepts of evolution.
I saw the same example given by a young-Earth creationist on a tv show. Sure, he was able to convince a bunch of people that know nothing about evolution that he was pointing out a real flaw in evolution, but that's not a legitimate criticism of the theory.
Then you have all your other areas of evolution such as cosmological, stellar and planetary, I don't think that they are usually taught in schools anyway because they can be quite complex but I may be wrong there, so don't quote me on that, I'll happily be corrected there!
One more correction: Stellar/solar/cosmological "evolution" has NOTHING to do with the biological Theory of Evolution. Nothing at all. That has a lot more to do with physics and chemistry and the like. Don't get me wrong, they are legitimate areas of study, but they are completely unrelated to what Darwin proposed.
Ivellious, rather than just say your wrong and imply that there is actual scientific basis for the connecting lines why not show how such a rationale is reached by scientists?
I have explained it before. Phylogenetic trees are developed based on a combination of morphological analysis (fossils, studying the physical and behavioral features of living things), and genetic evidence (studying genetic makeups of organisms to find lines of similarity and differences). It would be ridiculous to ask me to present a step-by-step process on how it is done. Read some research papers on the topic (there are literally thousands of them to choose from), or better yet, take a course on evolution from a local university, as opposed to thumping your chest when an undergraduate student doesn't present a dissertation's worth of information on one topic for you.
The position held by most here including myself is that the rationale used by scientists is not actually based on facts but assumption. To infer as a scientist that a part in one specie has similarities to another and this is sufficient to warrant a connection is where we have our problem since we also find similarity in other species that is relegated to being from convergent evolution. This calls into question whether any of those species who are asserted to be connected are not simply just another case of convergent evolution instead. How does one scientifically define when a form arises on its own or is a continuation from an ancestor?
We can see this rationale used here;
Of course there are inferences. No specific phylogenetic tree is set in stone, and they are all open to be revisited as new evidence is presented. But when looking at the evidence available, there are conclusions that can be drawn from it. But let's face it, there is no better explanation to draw from the evidence out there. Sure, I could be like some people and just say "what, evolution has no concrete answer right now? God did it, then." But I choose to avoid that.
Now, about the eye...I'll admit that there is no universally accepted hypothesis about the evolution of the eye. There is no scientific "theory of the evolution of the eye" because there is no consensus (as there is with the Theory of Evolution as a whole).
Also, I think you are possibly reading that statement incorrectly. It says that there is evidence to suggest that parts of the eye show that there is common ancestry involved in the eye...and that over the course of evolutionary history those base parts were modified/improved up to 40 distinct times in different organisms that gave rise to the variation in eye types today. Here is an actual scientific paper about this as well...their conclusion is that there is evidence that the eye has origins in a common ancestor but their current forms have simply been modified over time by various other aspects of the creatures that have them:
http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/ ... /2819.full
Unless there is a way to test a conclusion then it is not scientific.
Once again, you are essentially saying that anthropology, astronomy, geology, plate tectonics, many aspects of theoretical physics and chemistry, and numerous other fields of science are, in your opinion, BS. These are all fields based entirely on looking at evidence and finding the best explanations possible for them.