If you believe evolution can occur, I think it is only fair that you believe it can occur on all levels... like I said, you are having your cake and eating it too. Make a distinction: either agree or disagree but don't concede to one and argue the other.
Why? Why, if scientists observe e coli using glucose better, should I believe that all life can be explained as a long line of mutations? I mean, it has yet to be shown that natural selection is a mechanism (the only evidence on it shows that natural selection only causes traits to oscillate back and forth in populations...Icons of Evolution, Darwin Finches) capable of causing macroevolution. The bacteria is still the same bacteria, it can just use glucose better somehow (though how would be interesting to know). Especially when the evidence does not support macroevolution.
If you believe evolution can occur, I think it is only fair that you believe it can occur on all levels
Why? Evidence for micro, none for macro...
like I said, you are having your cake and eating it too. Make a distinction: either agree or disagree but don't concede to one and argue the other.
I am disagreeing on macroevolution, agreeing on microevolution, but I am not both disagreeing and agreeing on the same subject at the same time.
Evolution is, simply put, change over time.
Don't trifle with me using that definition, nobody is in disagreement over that definition. You put it TOO simply. So simply that we'd be talking about something else if we were to use that definition.
It is much more difficult to prove that species diverged or converged and descendant populations brought new innovations and adaptations to systems and therefore new species.
I'd say impossible, as there's no evidence for it.
This does not mean it did not happen and I can see the difficulty in believing that it may have.
Not being able to find the Boogey man under my bed doesn't mean he isn't there...but why believe in something with no evidence....ooohhh, yes, I forgot...it "supports" a materialistic worldview (using circular reasoning).
However, I think if many of us give biologists and scientists as a whole, time and effort to put forth into any theory, more and more supporting (or non-supporting) evidence will surface.
So, let's not argue until all the evidence is in...hhhmm...first, how would we know when "all" the evidence is in, and why wait? We can come to conclusions without all the evidence. It's possible. I mean, you want to come to the conclusion that evolution can explain your origins naturalistically...despite the lack of evidence for it.
Science is an ever-changing field, so one day the argument of evolution vs. creationism may be a ludicrous debate... but until then, evolution remains the most reasonable scientific explanation of how species have come about..
No it's not. There's no evidence for it. And if we shouldn't come to conclusions without all the evidence, then STOP coming to conclusions!