But, if you insist:
Darwin, and certainly others, noticed that animals like birds and reptiles changed from generation to generation and adapted to their environments based on survival of the fittest. A force exterior to the animal's internal reproductive system i.e., natural selection, decided which characteristics would dominate in the next generation(s). Natural selection guided the change. It looks like there is plenty of evidence showing adaptive change within a species.
Dogs have been bred from wolves. Certain characteristics have been selected by people for continuation into the next generations. Selective reproduction guided the change. There certainly has been change within the species.
If we keep breeding dogs for several hundred million years, can we make a fish? That's about all that can be said. It's all inconclusive.
If natural selection and people can guide change, then what could God do if He put his mind to it?
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Suppose things do evolve on their own, and with the right set of circumstances and lots of time, one species can morph into another.
Suppose evolution is a property of matter.
Where did all the matter come from? First there's matter, then a big cosmic bang that creates elements, then the planets, then atmosphere, then a biosystem that gets more complex with time. None of this excludes God from the process.
The seven days of Genesis could easily be seven phases of change and
development. It's okay to read it as allegory.