Most of evolution theory can be rechecked and tested for viability. The parts that can't are those that take more multiple human generations to produce substantial change from random or directed random mutations.
Those too can be tested, and they are put to the test every time a fossil is dug up of the ground or a genome is sequenced or a study in comparative anatomy is performed etc. But sure there are certain limits on what tests to perform, given our lack of time machines.
Suffice to say that if mutations were good, then species exposed to larger amounts of radiation would be better adapted than those shielded from mutation causing radiation.
In my second year of studying biology we actually UV radiated yeast cells to induce beneficial mutations, making them capable of surviving on a certain medium. We found no surviving colonies on plates with unradiated yeast. We found a few colonies on plates radiated for 3 seconds. Even more colonies at 6 seconds and it topped at 9 seconds. After that the number of colonies quickly dropped, as there had been introduced too much DNA damage for the yeast cells to be able to survive. We had new populations genetically different from the population they came from and selected to survive on a new medium. This is basically evolution in a single step where we controlled the quantity of mutations and the environmental selection, thereby inducing beneficial mutations. These are easily replicable experiments and biology classes do this and similar experiments every day around the world.
Btw, it's wrong to simply say that mutations are good. You're seeing things in a very black and white way. Mutations aren't either good or bad. Sometimes they're beneficial, sometimes they're harmful, usually they're neutral. When you simply say "mutations are good", you're essentially saying that 100% of mutations are good. That's neither what evolution requires, or proposes, so you're not addressing evolution at all.
Since we have no evidence for that, then the whole "random mutations as a source of new life forms" is invalid.
We do have evidence that mutations can be beneficial, and there are many examples if you dig through the literature. If you don't know how, I can dig out some studies or science articles for you to read.
Natural selection and forced selection of varieties of species can produce changes in populations. Dogs have been bred with certain characteristics for certain desired uses. While a DNA has been selected from the variations, no new DNA has been added.
That's a blind assertion. Since you're not omniscient, you're stating things without knowledge.
That said, you can read about the various mutations that we know occur in organisms, here:
Mutation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Now, let's make it simple. Take
any DNA sequence and you can turn into into any other sequence, using the mutations that are known to occur. You can try this for yourself. For instance, how can we turn CAT into TAGCT? Like this:
CAT-> duplication-> CATCAT -> inversion -> TACCAT -> substitution -> TAGCAT -> deletion -> TAGCT
Easy, isn't it? Of course creationists keep arguing that no new DNA was created, since it's just manipulating the existant DNA. So what? It's still an entirely different sequence, and that's the whole point.
Evolution theory covers how changes occur to DNA but does not cover how DNA was formed
Actually there are hypotheses about DNA taking over the heritary material of early life forms from an RNA world. But considering how long ago that happened, it's very difficult to examine. Still, not knowing everything, doesn't mean that we don't know anything. We know alot of what happened later. Keep in mind that scientific theories doesn't make us all-knowing. There will always be holes in our knowledge, no matter how good out theories are.
or how new chromosomes get added to create different forms of life.
There are known mechanisms whereby chromosomes arise, and again they arise not as entirely new, but as reworkings of the existing chromosomes. You can read about it in the link I gave. And a chromosome rearrangement doesn't result in entirely new life. Likely, the offspring will be more or less identical to its parents.
Evolutionists are at their boldest (and stretching) when stating that one species can evolve into another. That's not saying much.
Actually it's saying
much, as the species barrier is the only proposed barrier with any validity. Once that is crossed, you have made 2 distinct gene pools from a single gene pool. These can now evolve down their own paths, and split yet again at a later point. Hence the origin of species.
And it certainly doesn't explain the origins of DNA, why DNA works so hard to correct errors
Sure it does. Mutations are sometimes harmful, and if there are too many of them there will be too few surviving offspring, hence the individuals with better repair mechanisms will increase in numbers in proportion to the rest of the population. The repair mechanisms are imperfect too, which is ultimately a good thing, otherwise we wouldn't exist.
the adding of chromosomes, or the creation of new forms of life.
The origin of life you mean? Because as far as we know, that's the only emergence of life we know for sure happened. Abiogenesis is the field dedicated to that. The theory of evolution can still give clues about early life though, and this can be useful to the field of abiogenesis, but they are still different fields of research.
But they have faith that it does.
Nah.
But I'm glad that we agree that faith can be a bad thing, best to be avoided.
Peter
