Can I ask you a question? Have you ever actually seen a dinosaur population become birds?
Birds ARE dino's ED...
It's impossible to come up with a defintion that includes all (what you understand to be) dinosaurs that excludes birds.
Or an ape population become men?
Ditto. Humans ARE apes. It's impossible to come up with a definition that includes all (what you understand to be) apes that excludes humans.
Just like it is impossible to come up with a definition of mammals that includes all mammals but excludes humans.
Having said that, we don't need to observe events to know that they happened ED. You agree to this, because you don't require to SEE a murder take place to be able to conclude - purely by the evidence of a crime scene - that a murder took place.
I don't need to observe a truck crashing into a car to know that a truck crashed into a car. I can conclude that simply from seeing the aftermath.
Events leave a trace of evidence and evolutionary "events" aren't any different. I use quotes, because the process of evolution is a gradual phenomena.
We can look at our collective DNA, comparative anatomy, geographic distribution of species, the fossil record,... and draw the obvious conclusion.
Just like we can look at a dead body, the knife sticking in the back, the finger prints on the knife, the bloodstains on a t-shirt, etc etc etc and draw the obvious conclusion.
And we can test that conclusion as well.
Classifying species does not equal "evolution".
I merely clarified what "speciation" means. I didn't classify species. Speciation is when one species splits into several distinct new species.
It's variation "beyond the species level".
Variation in birds, insects, etc. does not equal "evolution"
Except that it does. No matter how hard you deny it.
You don't get to (re)define what evolution is and isn't.
The above definitions describe variation within a genus which is not "evolution".
Except that it is.
Evolution is ANY change past on to off spring. All changes are necessarily small. "Big changes" are no more or less then the accumulation of small changes. At no point does a member of species A give birth to a member of species B. Instead, the
poluation of A slowly accumulates small changes until it is so different that we might as well call it
population B.
There is no "line" where on the one side they are A and B on the other. It doesn't work that way.
Just like there is no point at which a human is a child one second and an adult the next second (not talking about the artificial distinction determined by law). It's a gradual process.
You completely refuse to acknowledge the fact that evolution is
small changes accumulating over generations. That's on you, not on me.
I don't get how people believe that they can argue against a theory by misrepresenting it.