One of the most important is that of fossils. We can see how individual species evolves and adapts over huge spans of time. Another example is diseases and viruses. They too, like us can evolve, get stronger, adapt, or whither away due to an external factor.
Fossils, Similarities in early development, and similar body structures
I do not so much " believe it " as I an convinced by the myriad lines of converging evidences that support the theory of evolution by natural selection. talkorigins.org
well typically no because most of the proof is all circumstantially evidences... so the answer is no
there is variation within the species the changes are not due to any other factor
Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection: The process by which favorable traits become more common in a population over successive generations. Lamarck's Theory of Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics: Organisms acquire traits during their lifetime and pass them on to their offspring. Genetic Drift: Changes in allele frequencies in a population due to random events. Mutation: Changes in the DNA sequence that can lead to genetic variation. Gene Flow: Movement of genes between populations through migration, influencing genetic diversity.
It is not a matter of agreement, it is a matter of accepting the overwhelming evidences in support of the theory of evolution by natural selection.
the five indirect evidences are :Trackable changes in DNAFossil evidenceObservable modern evolutionDemonstrable predictabilitySimilar morphology in structures as they changed
Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man was created in 1863.
Rather both. Evolution, the change in allele frequency over time in a population of organisms, is an observed and observable fact. The theory of evolution by natural selection explains this fact with overwhelming evidences from many different disciplines.
Art and scince
Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man has 300 pages.
the fossil record of change in earlier speciesthe chemical and anatomical similarities of related life formsthe geographic distribution of related speciesthe recorded genetic changes in living organisms over many generations