And three times and you are out.
By your standards the theory of evolution is "proven". But then you don't even know what a theory is.
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By your falling to your death from 30,000 feet, without a parachute proves the Theory of Evolution, that's a new one, can you verify that?
We have not been getting anywhere here. It is quite apparent that you have no science education at all.
In the world of science a theory is as good as it gets. Theories, if anything, outrank laws. You tried to put down the theory of evolution by pointing out that it was a still a theory. That is the same as pointing out that it is still a fact. In other words, you shot yourself in the foot.
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Not at all both of my feet are perfectly fine thank you.
While your theory of Evolution on the other hand needs some help.
THEORY:
A proposed explanation whose status is still conjectural and subject to experimentation, in contrast to well-established propositions that are regarded as reporting matters of actual fact.
Synonyms:
idea, notion hypothesis, postulate, contemplation, speculation, conjecture, or guess.
Synonym Study
In technical or scientific use, Theory, principle, and law represent established, evidence-based explanations
accounting for currently known facts or phenomena or for historically verified experience: the theory of relativity, the germ theory of disease, the law of supply and demand, the principle of conservation of energy.
Often the word law is used in reference to scientific facts that can be reduced to a mathematical formula: Newton's laws of motion.In these contexts the terms theory and law often appear in well-established,fixed phrases and are not interchangeable. In both technical and non technical contexts, theory can also be synonymous with hypothesis, a conjecture put forth as a possible explanation of phenomena or relations,serving as a basis for thoughtful discussion and subsequent collection of data or engagement in scientific experimentation in order to rule out alternative explanations and reach the truth.
In these contexts of early speculation, the words theory and hypothesis are often substitutable for one another: Remember, this idea is only a theory/hypothesis; Pasteur's experiments helped prove the theory/hypothesis that germs cause disease. Obviously, certain theories that start out as hypothetical eventually receive enough supportive data and scientific findings to become established, verified explanations. Although they retain the term theory in their names, they have evolved from mere conjecture to scientifically accepted fact.