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I'm not sure why people regard evolution as true when it's still just a theory, and always will be a theory.
And I'm talking evolution with a big E, as in "monkeys to man" kind.

In Science the word Theory has a different meaning to the one used in common use. The Atomic Theory, The Theory of Gravity, The Theory of Evolution, all have empirical evidences to back them up.I'm not sure why people regard evolution as true when it's still just a theory, and always will be a theory.
And I'm talking evolution with a big E, as in "monkeys to man" kind.

I'm not sure why people regard evolution as true when it's still just a theory, and always will be a theory.
And I'm talking evolution with a big E, as in "monkeys to man" kind.
I'm not sure why people regard evolution as true when it's still just a theory, and always will be a theory.

And I'm talking evolution with a big E, as in "monkeys to man" kind.

In Science the word Theory has a different meaning to the one used in common use. The Atomic Theory, The Theory of Gravity, The Theory of Evolution, all have empirical evidences to back them up.
I think you should read the definition of the word Theory when used in science and you will understand your mistake!![]()
Theory - A hypothesis that has been tested with a significant amount of data.
Scientific law - A theory that has been tested by and is consistent with generations of data.
No.
No no no no no.
No.
A law is a description of a phenomenon. It is not an attempt to explain the phenomenon. Laws do not "transcend" theories in terms of explanatory capability, and theories do not get promoted to laws.
A scientific law is a description of a phenomenon that has been thoroughly explained. Laws may not have more explanitory capability, but they have much more reliability. And in science, reliability is far more important. It would be nearly impossible for an entire theory to become law, but when a part of a theory has enough evidence for it, it becomes a law.
( and just to let you know, those definitions weren't something I made up on the spot, they came straight from my old biology textbook, which was written by a guy with a PhD in nuclear chemistry. You can take it up with him if you really want to).
A scientific law is a description of a phenomenon that has been thoroughly explained.
Laws may not have more explanitory capability, but they have much more reliability. And in science, reliability is far more important.
It would be nearly impossible for an entire theory to become law, but when a part of a theory has enough evidence for it, it becomes a law.
( and just to let you know, those definitions weren't something I made up on the spot, they came straight from my old biology textbook, which was written by a guy with a PhD in nuclear chemistry. You can take it up with him if you really want to).
Really? I've got a few physics books (not mine) that states that laws and theories are completely different. A law deals with what. A theory deals with why. Laws do not attempt to explain anything, nor are they necessarily about things that have been explained. They are just things that we know to be true through repeated observation.
Interesting. Someone really needs to make a lanuage where each word only has one definition.
Long time ago when i posted here under my surname Lindstrom, i posted a moral obejection against the evolutionary theory.
Now science causes people to percive the world in the way scientist discribes it, - it doesn't deal with ethics.
But if we assume that evolution is true, you will need a mere heart of stone to trust in it.
The evolutionary theory argues that people surviving oppression and rivalry are more fit then those who don't... the people not surviving it, is less fit, and did not have a chance to carry their genes to the next generation.
I find it somewhat cruel ethically speaking, and i do have moral objections towards the theory. don't you as a scientist have that?
A scientific law is a description of a phenomenon that has been thoroughly explained. Laws may not have more explanitory capability, but they have much more reliability. And in science, reliability is far more important. It would be nearly impossible for an entire theory to become law, but when a part of a theory has enough evidence for it, it becomes a law.
( and just to let you know, those definitions weren't something I made up on the spot, they came straight from my old biology textbook, which was written by a guy with a PhD in nuclear chemistry. You can take it up with him if you really want to).
Evolution makes no moral claims. It also isn't "survival of the fittest", but rather "survival of the most adaptable".
Not always- some organisms can evolve to become less adaptable and more specialized.
Interesting. Someone really needs to make a lanuage where each word only has one definition.
That's not really possible, from a linguistic perspective. If you mean where each word has an unambiguous meaning, then that's possible, but definitions are not innate to words.