A few quick replies while I do more important things...
<< Napalm381, you have offered nothing but cut and pastes from a website that supports your religion, >>
They have already taken the time to put together a lengthy, thorougly documented paper, which uses references that I most likely would not have been able to find. Why not take advantage of well written documents that support my argument?
<< . A good scientist has more than one source. >>
There are many, many references from numerous journals and the like cited in the documents I have offered.
<< If you wish to challenge the theory of evolution, you must address that evidence. You must show that the evidence is either wrong or irrelevant or that it fits another theory better. >>
The creationists here have offered no such statements.
<< Show me the evidence.(Exact evidence) >>
Please clarify what you wish to have evidence for. Microevolution? Macroevolution? Something else?
<< because there is not enough proof to support it. >>
I will ask: did you carefully read the documents I offered? They point to numerous documented examples of speciation. Those are not proof?
How do you explain the fact that genetic coding for codons is the same in virtually ever life-form examined? The coding is shared by everything from bacteria to humans. The exceptions to the near universality of the coding is in certain single-celled organisms and organelles in cells. This points to a divergence very early in the history of life. Please explain how the FACT that everything from bacteria to mammals shares the EXACT same genetic coding for mRNA codons.
I again quote talkorigins:
Q: "The theory of evolution says that life originated, and evolution proceeds, by random chance."
There is probably no other statement which is a better indication that the arguer doesn't understand evolution. Chance certainly plays a large part in evolution, but this argument completely ignores the fundamental role of natural selection, and selection is the very opposite of chance. Chance, in the form of mutations, provides genetic variation, which is the raw material that natural selection has to work with. From there, natural selection sorts out certain variations. Those variations which give greater reproductive success to their possessors (and chance ensures that such beneficial mutations will be inevitable) are retained, and less successful variations are weeded out. When the environment changes, or when organisms move to a different environment, different variations are selected, leading eventually to different species. Harmful mutations usually die out quickly, so they don't interfere with the process of beneficial mutations accumulating.
You constantly insult my use of a biology textbook and other scientific references. Why do you object to using scientific sources to discuss a scientific subject? Is a biology textbook not a wise reference for biological concept? Furthermore, you have not offered one reference apart from a dictionary definition.