(BondiHarry;49573)
Lunar, you have a penchant to mince words and throw out insults. No matter the terminology used, having a finch 'evolve' into another 'species' of finch only demonstrates micro-evolution. Your case for macro-evolution wasn't helped one iota by the example you provided and the 'observable evidence' hardly makes a convincing case for macro-evolution. You've provided no compelling evidence to believe that macro-evolution occurs and you seem to use this thread primarily as a vehicle to be rude to others. If that is your ultimate desire I can refer you to another web site where you'll be right at home with other pride filled posters who will absolutely eat up what you have to say.
I didn't mince anything. You specifically said that transition from one species to another has never been observed. I provided Darwin's finches as a counterexample to this statement.As for the entirety of macroevolutionary theory, of course it's never been directly observed - human beings didn't even exist as a species for the vast majority of the history of organic life. It is something which is categorically impossible to observe directly but I hope you know enough about science to know that this does not rule it out as a valid scientific theory. As has been mentioned earlier in this thread, gravity is also impossible to observe directly (well, within the past few years some have hypothesized that we actually can observe gravity waves, but certainly gravity was a sound scientific theory even before this). We do, however, observe the effects of gravity, just as we do with macroevolution when we observe the transitional fossils or similar genetic structures between organisms.I've tried to provide examples of evidence of it on a broader scale throughout this thread, although as usual no one seems particularly interested in paying attention to them. The countless transitional fossils in the fossil record is a good place to start - contrary to what creationists repeat, there are numerous of examples of this (in fact, it's most accurate to state that every fossil of an organism is a transitional fossil). Look into the Tiktaalik (transitional phase between fish and amphibians), the Archaeopteryx (transitional phase between dinosaur and bird), and the Ambulocetus (transitional phase between land-dwelling mammals and whales), for starters.(Bondi Harry)
Not really. Believing that there are many things going on in reality that we are woefully unprepared to grasp doesn't mean that anything is possible.
It's interesting that you would define the supernatural as "things which we cannot explain." I'll be the first to admit (based on evolutionary theory, ironically enough) that it is entirely likely that there are things in this universe which we cannot hope to comprehend. We've evolved to perceive the world in a particular way because it was useful for us; these perceptory mechanisms may be fundamentally inadequate to fully comprehend, say, a complete theory of quantum mechanics.The difference between you and I is that I don't recognize this for what it is - either as-of-yet undiscovered science, or science which we simply cannot hope to discover - and don't posit a God to explain these gaps.