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Well, yeah. There is difference between the word "theory" which has yet to be proven as fact and "fact" which has in fact been proven. I'm seeing evolution being used both ways here. If it hasn't been proven beyond all doubt than it is in fact still a theory and not a fact.squeek you're going back and forth and all over the place on this issue.
I get it that you can't test Creationsim at all so it loses credibility, but on that note can you test evolution either? It takes so long for a species to change how can that be tested and measured? Empirical observation might cover looking at Cro-Mangnon bones and then us, but what about all those missing links in between?Just to chime in here you seem to be using a more common usage form of theory as opposed to a scientific theory. This is what a scientific theory is
In science a theory is a testable model of the manner of interaction of a set of natural phenomena, capable of predicting future occurrences or observations of the same kind, and capable of being tested through experiment or otherwise verified through empirical observation.
This is what Carcharodon has been trying to point out. A scientific theory is more than just a simply group of propositions to explain something. Its something that is testable and can make predictions on things. It is also something that is verified after a lot of testing. So you can't really compare the scientific theory of evolution as being equal to the common usage definition of theory that creationism falls into.
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