Azazel
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Indeed hence my annoyance of the ignorant people worshiping evolution when they have no idea how complex life is
That's very rich coming from people who worship deities who's existence cannot be proven by any means.No one worships evolution,If people were worshipping evolution then evolutionary science would've been stuck at 18th century Just like religions are stuck at stone ages.
Or maybe its time for you to come out of 1870s theory and hit 21st century
No its not me who is stuck in 1870s its you.
Theory:
A supposition or a system of ideas intended to explain something, esp. one based on general principles independent of the thing to be...: "Darwin's theory of evolution"
A scientific theory is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world, based on a body of knowledge that has been repeatedly confirmed through observation and experiment.
Unfortunately for Darwin, there was no experiment involved...
As I said you are stuck in 1870s,Come to 21st century.In 21st century evidence of Theory of Evolution is derived from various branches of biology which include particularly genetics, cytology, systematics, botany, morphology, ecology and paleontology.
The best current one is the E coli long term evolution experiment. Started in 1988 it has followed the evolution of E coli for 52,000 generations. That's about 1,250,000 years in human generations. The E coli have evolved and produced a new species.
With the advent of DNA testing evolution has been confirmed through experimentation. Darwin didn't dream of such technology but on going discoveries confirm the process of natural selection and evolution.
You can also review the major court cases on evolution. These are ones where the explaination of evolution has been judged in court.
Overview of the E. coli long-term evolution experiment
Ten Major Court Cases about Evolution and Creationism | NCSE
A body of descriptions of knowledge is usually only called a theory if it has fulfilled these criteria:
It makes falsifiable predictions with consistent accuracy across a broad area of scientific inquiry (such as mechanics).
It is well-supported by many independent strands of evidence, rather than a single foundation. This ensures that it is probably a good approximation, if not completely correct.
It is consistent with pre-existing theories and other experimental results. (Its predictions may differ slightly from pre-existing theories in cases where they are more accurate than before.)
It can be adapted and modified to account for new evidence as it is discovered, thus increasing its predictive capability over time.
It is among the most parsimonious explanations, sparing in proposed entities or explanations. (See Occam's razor. Since there is no generally accepted objective definition of parsimony, this is not a strict criterion, but some theories are much less economical than others.)
Fact:
A thing that is indisputably the case
Drama queen,why play with the words you clearly don't know.Fact means something that is known to have happened or to exist, especially something for which proof exists, or about which there is information.And the evolution by the means of selection is a fact since it has over the years provided with tons of evidence and In 150 years no major tenet of evolutionary theory has been overturned.
fact noun - definition in British English Dictionary & Thesaurus - Cambridge Dictionary Online
Law: An individual rule as part of such a system
Now please stop showing us more evidence of your lack of knowledge!
Again playing with the words.That's not the meaning of the word law in science,this explanation came from the law books.The laws of science or scientific laws are statements that describe, predict, and perhaps explain why, a range of phenomena behave as they appear to in nature.An analogous term for a scientific law is a principle.
Scientific laws:
1.summarize a large collection of facts determined by experiment into a single statement,
2.can usually be formulated mathematically as one or several statements or equation, or at least stated in a single sentence, so that it can be used to predict the outcome of an experiment, given the initial, boundary, and other physical conditions of the processes which take place,
3.are strongly supported by empirical evidence - they are scientific knowledge that experiments have repeatedly verified (and never falsified). Their accuracy does not change when new theories are worked out, but rather the scope of application, since the equation (if any) representing the law does not change. As with other scientific knowledge, they do not have absolute certainty like mathematical theorems or identities, and it is always possible for a law to be overturned by future observations.
4.are often quoted as a fundamental controlling influence rather than a description of observed facts. I.e. "the laws of motion require that"
As used in science, both these terms "law" and "theory" share some things in common. Both are based on tested hypotheses; both are supported by a large body of empirical data; both help unify a particular field; both are widely accepted by the vast majority (if not all) scientists within a discipline. Furthermore, both scientific laws and scientific theories could be shown to be wrong at some time if there are data to suggest so.Remember how Einstien proved that the Newtonian "Laws" of mechanics did not explain everything.
Both these words are remarkably similar but the difference between them is that a law describes what nature does under certain conditions, and will predict what will happen as long as those conditions are met. A theory explains how nature works. Others delineate law and theory based on mathematics -- Laws are often times mathematically defined (once again, a description of how nature behaves) whereas theories are often non-mathematical. Looking at things this was helps to explain, in part, why physics and chemistry have lots of "laws" whereas biology has few laws (and more theories). In biology, it is very difficult to describe all the complexities of life with "simple" (relatively speaking!) mathematical terms.
Regardless of which definitions one uses to distinguish between a law and a theory, scientists would agree that a theory is NOT a "transitory law, a law in waiting". There is NO hierarchy being implied by scientists who use these words. That is, a law is neither "better than" nor "above" a theory. From this view, laws and theories "do" different things and have different roles to play in science. Furthermore, notice that with any of the above definitions of law, neither scientists nor nature "conform" to the law. In science, a law is not something that is dictated to scientists or nature; it is not something that a scientist or nature has to do under threat of some penalty if they don't conform.
Literature Cited
Futuyma, D. J. 1979. Evolutionary Biology. Sinauer Assoc.
Krimsley, V. S. 1995. Introductory Chemistry, 2nd Ed. Brooks/Cole Publishing Co., Pacific Grove.
Lincoln, R. J., G. A. Boxshall, and P. F. Clark. 1990. A dictionary of ecology, evolution and systematics. Cambridge Univ. Press.
Moore, J. A. 1984. Science as a way of knowing--evolutionary biology. Amer. Zool. 24: 467-534.
Oxford English Dictionary, 1961; Oxford University Press, London.
Steen, E. B. 1971. Dictionary of Biology. Barnes and Nobel.
No please do stop posting such ignorance.