No need for shouting. We can hear you just fine.
"THIS STATEMET IS FALSE. EVOLUTION IS A WIDELY-ACCEPTED THEORY, NOT AN ESTABLISHED FACT."
No, your statement is incomplete.
Evolution is a widely accept theory, alright. To be more accurate, we might should say that the theory of evolution is an umbrella under which quite a few theories and hypothesis exist. But the theory of evolution seeks to explain what is accepted in science as the fact of evolution. In science, the common ancestry of life on earth is considered fact. Therefore is is most accurate to consider evolution as both fact and theory, for that is what it is.
A great analogy is with gravity. Just as we can see common descent in so many different ways, we also have many different types of observations that show us the facts of gravity. And just as we are still working through the theories of how evolution happens, so too are we working through theories of gravity. General relativity has been one productive theory, but it is completely at odds with quantum mechanics in areas in which they overlap. Lots of work has gone into a quantum theory of gravity, but it has yet to be real fruitful. We theorize the graviton as the force carrying particle of gravity, but it has yet to be observed. In some ways, you might could make a case that we know more about evolution than we do about gravity.
"THIS STATEMENT IS JUST PLAIN STUPID. EVOLUTION REQUIRES THAT SOMETHING NEW BE CREATED AND PASSED ON TO THE NEXT GENERATION. YOU CAN SAVE ALL THE "CENTS" YOU WANT FOR AS LONG AS YOU WANT. IN THE END THEY WILL STILL BE JUST A BUNCH OF CENTS."
It is not a stupid statement. He is pointing out that if you accept small changes as fact, there is no reason to draw a line which limits how much accumulated small changes are possible. It is an arbitrary and capricious distinction to separate the two.
As far as the rest of your statement goes, there are observed mechanisms, such as duplication and shuffling, which can create new and useful genetic sequences without destroying any previously existing functions of the organism. In the present, examples can be given of new functions conferred upon organisms through these mechanisms. In the past, it can be shown by looking at the genomes of organisms today that their DNA shows the marks of having been produced through such gradual mechanisms. So your analogy of "THEY WILL STILL BE JUST A BUNCH OF CENTS" is flawed.
"THIS STATEMET IS FALSE. EVOLUTION IS A WIDELY-ACCEPTED THEORY, NOT AN ESTABLISHED FACT."
No, your statement is incomplete.
Evolution is a widely accept theory, alright. To be more accurate, we might should say that the theory of evolution is an umbrella under which quite a few theories and hypothesis exist. But the theory of evolution seeks to explain what is accepted in science as the fact of evolution. In science, the common ancestry of life on earth is considered fact. Therefore is is most accurate to consider evolution as both fact and theory, for that is what it is.
A great analogy is with gravity. Just as we can see common descent in so many different ways, we also have many different types of observations that show us the facts of gravity. And just as we are still working through the theories of how evolution happens, so too are we working through theories of gravity. General relativity has been one productive theory, but it is completely at odds with quantum mechanics in areas in which they overlap. Lots of work has gone into a quantum theory of gravity, but it has yet to be real fruitful. We theorize the graviton as the force carrying particle of gravity, but it has yet to be observed. In some ways, you might could make a case that we know more about evolution than we do about gravity.
"THIS STATEMENT IS JUST PLAIN STUPID. EVOLUTION REQUIRES THAT SOMETHING NEW BE CREATED AND PASSED ON TO THE NEXT GENERATION. YOU CAN SAVE ALL THE "CENTS" YOU WANT FOR AS LONG AS YOU WANT. IN THE END THEY WILL STILL BE JUST A BUNCH OF CENTS."
It is not a stupid statement. He is pointing out that if you accept small changes as fact, there is no reason to draw a line which limits how much accumulated small changes are possible. It is an arbitrary and capricious distinction to separate the two.
As far as the rest of your statement goes, there are observed mechanisms, such as duplication and shuffling, which can create new and useful genetic sequences without destroying any previously existing functions of the organism. In the present, examples can be given of new functions conferred upon organisms through these mechanisms. In the past, it can be shown by looking at the genomes of organisms today that their DNA shows the marks of having been produced through such gradual mechanisms. So your analogy of "THEY WILL STILL BE JUST A BUNCH OF CENTS" is flawed.