For evolutionary theory a simple google scholar search yields an extensive library of research on evolution.
https://academic.oup.com/gbe/article/7/5/1296/605886https://science.sciencemag.org/content/283/5407/1476https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1715338/pdf/ajhg00124-0223.pdfhttp://nekhbet.com/king.pdfhttps://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=hcPSag2pn9IC&oi=fnd&pg=PR9&dq=evolution&ots=LTxgG4P07b&sig=fSJ6CZi_bvr5E0PxsKuJPnDzxHM#v=onepage&q=evolution&f=falseSome Homo Sapiens Related Stuff too:
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/309/5741/1720https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0092867404011432https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rstb.2015.0237And that's just scratching the surface. I could easily dredge up thousands and thousands of research articles like this. I encourage you to pick one and try to read through it carefully. Note how meticulous and careful the sort of work that is being presented in these papers.
Meanwhile, a google scholar search on creationism will yield hardly any formal literature. Some well written books that don't have a lot of research backing to them, but nevertheless, these are the sort of actual scientific articles you find:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2386841/https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev.genom.4.070802.110400https://science.sciencemag.org/content/331/6016/404https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2000-08766-011These articles are not addressing creationism as a theory, but actually addressing the social science, the science of science and communication, aspect of how creationism maintains its strong hold.
You will find the same sort of theme in global warming vs. denialism
And the same thing with flat earth theorists.
A scientist is trained to be a skeptic on everything. Advanced degreed scientists, in their training, spend years working on research projects, only the be scrutinized, criticized, and questioned by their peers on every little nook and cranny on what they have done. Sometimes years of work get shot down by a single devastating question.
Considering this, it should be considered remarkable on how universal the consensus is in science accepting evolutionary theory.
Religion trains you to be faithful and believe, with very limited and vague hard ground truth. It is in fact a sort of challenge to believe, because it isn't obviously clear where its source is, persey. And that's fine.
You can see why I want to separate these two, as these sorts of views are inherently incompatible with one another.
As a scientist, your job is to put everything else aside and play the role of the skeptic. You doubt everything. You criticize everything. You look at the evidence in front of you and you look at it objectively. And not ad hoc willy willy either. Most definitely NOT with what the bible says as an initial "firewall". You look at peer reviewed articles. You look at professionally and meticulously done work with very specific objectives. With the knowledge from the statistical analyses and physical interpretations you obtain from your studies, and after much scrutiny, you then build your ideas from robust analysis which know how to utilize them, and reject the ones that don't.
If you truly want to be a scientist, this is something you will have to come to terms to. I know that it can be really difficult to "doubt" the bible, so to speak, but you HAVE to understand that you cannot be a true scientist unless you are willing to throw away everything you know and accept something different as "truth".
Until you can realize and come to terms with this, it is my duty to reject you as a scientist.
A few more thoughts:
My religious peers can justify evolutionary theory. This is some of their reconciliating thoughts that they have:
Have you considered that the early bible and the miracles of Jesus are meant to be taken allegorically and not literally? Perhaps then, instead of creationism, we should consider that god brought us into existence via his very genetic changes He envisioned?
What is a "year" to god?
The bible you read is at least twice, if not thrice, translated from its original language. Most words between languages are far from being able to match conotatively. There is no such "perfect translation" of the bible, and the true contations of it have probably been lost for centuries.
The books of the bible may have been given by God to the prophets, but they were written by humans. Humans are flawed creatures (even prophets), who may not have fully understood God's word.
Some of my peers are willing to separate their spirituality from the science (which is probably the best solution here), and therefore scientific evolution and spiritual creationism can coexist.
Another note:
Religions themselves debate amongst themselves who is the true religion. Is it Christianity? Islam? Judaism? Hinduism? Buddhism? Baha'i Faith (btw I think baha'i is a really cool concept)? Therefore, just accepting one of these to be irrevocably true and inexplictly intertwined with every aspect of life is just simply inappropriate. By doing so you really don't give any of these other religions any acknowledgement. However, if you are willing to split your frames of reference you can find space to accept and respect all of them.
Edited 2/5/2020 23:43:02