Thanks for confirming that you have no observational evidence of the "single universal common ancestor"
Any time. We certainly don't have the kind of evidence that would tell us exactly how chemistry became biology that time.
and therefore must make gross assumptions to support your belief system.
There are a lot of really good models of abiogenesis, as it is called, with lots of observations of chemistry spontaneously doing the kinds of things we see in living cells. But there is not a proper scientific theory of abiogenesis in the same way that the theory of evolution by natural selection is a complete 'proved' explanation for how life came to have the variety of species it does.
The original appearance of the first living species is very interesting but isn't really that important, in my opinion. It would probably become more important to me if creationists could give a testable explanation for how gods breathe into dirt to make humans, and so on. As for my belief system, it can be entirely changed by unambiguous evidence, and while that might not strike you as very reliable, I like the fact that I can claim to hold a worldview based on things that can reasonably be said to be true. Life from invisible beings breathing into dirt I would say cannot reasonably be said to be true.
You have a lot of unproveable theories in your bag of tricks.
'Provable', if you mean like in mathematics, isn't important to me. I could be wrong, just as you could be wrong. I can be proved wrong, which is always gives the possibility that I might learn something new, and indeed that has happened often.
But science doesn't deal with 'proved', it deals with probability. But, in the common non-scientific sense of the word, evolution by natural selection is proved beyond any reasonable doubt. It can be disproved, but creationists have failed over the past 160 years to disprove it. Most claims of creationism that have been tested have been proved wrong. The earth is not young, the complexity turns out not to be irreducible, the Second Law of Thermodynamics does not prohibit evolution in any way, and so on.
Nonsense. Science is your "god" and therefore MUST "explain all things".
Well the problem there is that science has not explained all things. But science doesn't try to hide from its failings, whereas already you have told me that I am a silly materialist when I ask for a photograph of your god, which I consider to be you hiding your god from a serious consideration of the question.
Your personal opinions don't have any weight with me and your hatred of God is duly noted.
It would be pretty insane for me to hate your god, wouldn't it.
Indeed, the Bible says that the created kinds reproduce after their kind. No great mystery there as we do observe this all the time. That's called science.
Creation.com has this diagram of the evolutionary tree model:
and this one, of the creationist orchard model.
I imagine you would agree with the lower one, and it does match what you write above. Had you considered that the two diagrams are pretty much the same, but the first one just starts further back in time, meaning your only objection is to what is claimed to have happened in time before the point you believe creation happened?
Once again, we observe reproduction along with "change" all of the time. This does NOT prove that all life has a single universal common ancestor.
No, what proves it is patterns in things like endogenous retroviruses. If a stretch of virus DNA gets permanently stuck into the germ cell line (sperm or egg cells) then it can be passed on along with the rest of the DNA. If you find the same virus DNA in the same location in two different species (and find several viruses with the same pattern) then you can know they shared a common ancestor more recently than other species without the same number of identical viruses. Build up a database of which modern species have which viruses where and you get a tree that almost perfectly matches the tree of life you get from looking at fossils. That alone proves common ancestry beyond doubt.
But I do understand that your religion requires one.
According to the data I submitted in my country's last census, I don't have a religion, and I think that means legally I don't have a religion.
Once again, we observe reproduction with distinct limitations and not the free-for-all that evolutionists dream of.
Can you give an example of what you mean by this free-for-all?
Stuart