He won't be sure 100% of the facts though, since he wasn't there to directly observe. Therefore what you are admitting is that evolutionists don't know all the facts, and are guessing.
Indeed, as is the case for
all science. Nonetheless, he can acquire 99.99999% of the facts, and, from them, be 99.9999999% confident that his hypotheses as to what happened in the past is true.
No one says they have
all the facts. Facts are coming in all the time. That's why science is so powerful: it can
change. If a new fact contradicts an established theory, then that theory is thrown out the window. Scientists perform experiments with the sole intention of
disproving their theory.
This claim falls outside of the scientifc method though, since it can not be observed or experimented.
How do you observe or experiment ''common descent''?
You observe the various mechanisms and phenomena that the theory predicts occur: the theory predicts various natural selection and kin selection, a variety of types of speciation (allopatric, peripatric, etc), a twin-nested heirarchy (i.e., we can classify organisms top-down by anatomy, and bottom-up by genetics, and these taxonomic classifications would be identical), convergent evolution, island speciation, etc, etc.
All of these things we observe. All of these things are what we expect to see if the theory is true. If we didn't see any of these things, then the theory isn't true.
We can experiment on the theory by tinkering with population dynamics: we can cause a group of fruit flies to speciate into two separate species, precisely as predicted by the theory. We can experiment to observe the evolution of new, specified, complex functions (such as a population of
E. coli evolving the ability to ingest citric acid). We can even make predictions that organism X should exist (or should have once exist) - Darwin successfully predicted the existence of a species of moth with an exceptionally long proboscis, because he found a species of plant with an exceptionally specialised body. Lo and behold, he found it. We can also predict various 'transition' forms (a creationist misnomer if ever there was one, but whatever). Lo and behold, we find them. We find them in such abundance that we've actually virtually completed several evolutionary lineages, such as the horse and the whale.
Furthermore, even if we didn't observe these things, even if we didn't perform these myriad of experiments, the sheer evidence that has been built up over the past 150 years is enough to prove the theory beyond all reasonable doubt.
You say that it isn't science. Yet, virtually all scientists today not only believe the theory is true, they believe it is proven to the degree that the chemical theory of atoms is true.
Which is an interesting aside: we cannot directly observe atoms. Do you therefore say that atoms don't exist? Or that atoms aren't sceince?
You are confusing science with a belief.
Science is a method for acquiring knowledge about the world. A belief is any statement affirmed to be true. I believe in the theory of common descent because I consider it to be true.
And yet there are thousands of fossil experts who don't believe the fossils show evolution.
Source?
In fact the modern founder of palaeontology was a creationist (Georges Cuvier).
He died before Darwin published his theory, so that's not really a big surprise, is it.
Fossils thus can only be interpreted, but what you are doing is this:
I believe in theory x.
Since theory x is not y, the theory y is wrong.
x = evolution. y = creation.
Where did I say anything like that? I haven't even
mentioned Creationism once.
I could use the exact same argument to support my view of y. But the facts remains with the evidence. Since fossils can only be interpreted they are not evidence for anything. Just because you believe fossils show evolution doesn't mean they do, you just interpret them that way Creationists interpret them differently.
I disagree. Creationist must resort to this 'interpretation' argument because it a) puts theory religious dogma on par with a well-established scientific theory, and b) let's them hand-wave away
any evidence that would otherwise support evolution or refute Creationism. It's a sad ploy from someone cornered.
At the end of the day, the facts are the facts. You can't twist them to support Creationism any more than you can twist the facts that support quantum mechanics to
refute quantum mechanics.
See above.
And thanks for also agreeing evolution is not directly observable. This is how an actual debate can start, with some common ground and honesty. Evolution is not observable.
If you want to find common ground and honesty,
stop putting words in my mouth.
I never said that evolution is not directly observable.
I never said that "I believe in theory x. Since theory x is not y, the theory y is wrong.", nor anything to that effect.