In science, the Empirical Method is generally taken to mean the collection of data on which to base a theory or derive a conclusion, not the other way around. I didn't say you test a theory before you make it...
Fine. But you are confusing it with the experimental method. You can collect data about the past. So your argument that you can't use the empirical method fails. You do.
That's exactly what Darwin did. He went to Galapagos to study the fauna there. And based on the data he collected there is proposed his theory.
The fossil record does not allow experiments but it does allow the empirical method
The problem is that most of evolutionary theory is not testable, so it cannot be empirical.
The theory of evolution is perfectly falsifiable.
Ok, we have to seperate two things here. The possibility of Darwinian evolution to have caused our evolution and if Darwinian evolution actually did.
About the first there is little to argue. Darwinian evolution is a mathematical process that can be tested in simulations by computers very quickly.
If Darwinian principles don't work as a blind designer in computer simulations then evolution is wrong.
Then the next question is if this process actually occurs in life. This is only possible if there is DNA, if there are mutations and if there is selection.
If there were no DNA then evolution would be wrong.
If DNA was copied with no error at all, evolution would be wrong.
If animals with unfit genes would have just as good a chance to reproduce and pass on their genes as animals with fit genes, evolution would be wrong.
So then we have established that Darwinian evolution as a mathematical process works and that it occurs in biological life. The question is if evolution actually gave the results that it could potentially have produced. Just because it could happen doesn't mean that it did.
Darwinian evolution predicts that we descended from a common ancestor. So we look at the fossil record. What we see is a general gradual increase in compexity. If the oldest creatures on this planet were by far the most complex, evolution would be wrong.
Darwinian evolution predicts that animals need to evolve first before they can exist. If we find a fossil of bats living in the precambrian then we know evolution is wrong.
Evolution claims that the gene pool of a species should be changing constantly. If this is true then we should be able to see this in creatures with a very high reproduction rate. For example bacteria and viruses. And that is what we see. New viruses appear and viruses are constantly changing. If viruses did not change at all evolution would be wrong.
Darwinian evolution claims that creatures evolve because random mutations that are beneficial are selected and then passed on more often so that these mutated genes become very prolific in a creature's gene pool. And that by this step by step progress complex systems can be designed by a blind designer.
For evolution to design a complex process each step towards this complex system needs to be beneficial, otherwise it won't get selected. Evolution cannot make a future 'investment'; "This is useless now, but believe me, it will help build the eye in the future."
If an eye would be totally useless without it's lens then mutating an eye without a lens would not be beneficial and could not have been an evolutionary stepping stone towards an eye. If the mutation towards an eye was not beneficial in any way, it doesn't have to function like an eye from the beginning, this evolution could not have occurred because it wouldn't have been selected by the process through which evolution operates.
The designs of evolution are very limited. Evolution can never design an organism better than it needs to be. If a creature can reproduce just fine with a major design flaw this design flaw will not be eliminated. If we have a planet with only organisms that lack these flaws, for example back pain in all vertebrates, we know evolution did not design these organisms.
Evolution can only design a new creature based on an old one. This means all creatures need to share morphology with each other. If we postulated that land animals evolved from sea animals then land animals need to share features with sea animals, even though one would have liked to design them from scratch.
This also means that in similar animals we should see the same basic structures. For example, in a flower we should see sepals, petals, stigma, style and ovary while colour, size and the way these parts are arranged in it's specific structure should be different.
If all flowers were build up from totally different parts then we know evolution is wrong.
I could go on. But it is clear that just because you cannot imagine evidence against evolution, it's not that easy because evolution is so obviously part of our reality we can't imagine how the world would look like without evolution, just as we can't imagine how reality would be without gravity, so I will stop here.
Note that I only talked about blunt refutations of the whole idea of evolution and not about the tons of direct and observable evidence for evolution. You can proof a theory wrong, but you can only show evidence to make a theory probable.
Many traditional explanations of major evolutionary transitions are not testable and therefore have no scientific content, for example, ideas about how flight must have evolved, rely on faith in the particular workings of natural selection or other evolutionary processes.
No. And your example is so ambiguous that I can't even respond to it. Also, here you claim that evolutionary explanations are not testable, not that evolution is not testable.
Surely evolution would be testable while it would be impossible to explain why certain things evolved but not other features.
Scientists must reconstruct history for evolution to be valid.
No. Obviously not. It is very well possible for evolution to have occurred without it being possible for us to figure out how it occurred.
Surely you won't argue that the fact that we can't figure out HOW a murder was committed proves that it never happened.
What you say here is very very wrong.
A bone you pick up in Africa might be a hominid and might persuasively be not far from the direct line to living humans, they might conclude. But you can never really know, because not enough information is preserved.
That could be possible.
Time has wiped away direct evidence, if there ever was any. Since direct evidence does not exist, any conclusion that leads to a theory of evolution is a conclusion that is based on a BELIEF that the evidence AT ONE POINT EXISTED, and not based on varifiable evidence that one can see and touch. That is shotty science
You find a fossil bone that you can't really classify and then that proves direct evidence is per definition impossible and that proves evolution is based on belief?
This is just poor ad hoc reasoning.
The evidence I have been exposed to is full of half-baked ideas and beliefs (and outright misrepresentations).
Maybe that is because you have already decided what position to take regardless of what the evidence may indicate?
What if reality as we know it now is different than the reality that created the universe?
Reality created the universe? I am not sure if you forget the middle of this sentence but in this way it makes no sense.
We know too little about the world to say that we have charted the whole of reality. Scientists are only now starting to unlock some of the mysteries of space, for example.
I am not saying we know everything about reality. But the definition of supernatural is that it cannot be explained. If something can be observed then it can be explained and put into laws of nature. If we can't observe something then it cannot interact with out reality. If it can't interact with out reality it is separate from our reality. And if it did interact then we would be able to observe this interaction and put it in laws of nature.
Just because we can't explain something doesn't mean it is supernatural. On the contrary. We just don't know everything yet. So Newton thinking that the orbits of the planets could not be explained because he thought it was supernatural because he didn't know how it worked is an example for how he was wrong.
Not sure what your point is.
Of course you would, you're an atheist... 
Uuh, this has no relation with atheism. You still seem to confuse atheism with a rational person, a person that is skeptical, a person that bases his world view on science, etc. But while an atheist may be all of these things, he may also not be all of these things.
If I claim I will not believe in a supernatural god, supernatural big bang and that I will believe in a natural god, a natural big bang if there is enough evidence then surely this does not define me as an atheist.
Right, but he still believed evolution was absurd.
I never heard Einstein's opinion on Darwinian evolution. And even if he did it is totally irrelevant. Science doesn't operate through authority. We have heroes, but they don't tell us what to think.
Maybe you can quote Einstein's argument against evolution, if he made one.
He said, "I believe in Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with fates and actions of human beings."
Do you know what Spinoza's god is? To him god is nature, god is the universe. God is this godless universe.
He didn't believe in god, he believed in naturalistic spirituality and he called it 'god'. Now, he shouldn't have used the word 'god', but he did. And some people seem to like this, including Einstein.
On a completely separate note, did you know that Darwin was a racist?
First of all, this is not really relevant. While racism is far worse than being a Christian, I think being a Christian is not a good thing. What if I rejected the Copernican world view because Copernicus was a Christian? How absurd would that be?
Secondly, in Darwin's time everyone had views we would not label as 'racist'. People were just ignorant and believed there were different races of humans. It just seemed that way because some ethnicities had less developed cultures exclusively.
But Darwin was better than most people. He opposed slavery. He was not intolerant of different kinds of people all present day racists would be.
He went as far as saying that over time the 'civilized races' would exterminate the 'savage races'.
The subtitle of his book was: "On the origin of species by means of natural Selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life"
Favoured races refers to the variations within a species which survive. It has nothing to do with racism. Even if it were true that the English people of that time were favoured by natural selection and would thus allow mankind to avoid extinction, then this still doesn't mean we should exterminate all other peoples.
This just shows that your only knowledge is creationist propaganda.
As for Hitler, which you did mention but removed.
Social Darwinism has little to do with Darwinian evolution. It was made up by Thomas Malthus and Herbert Spencer and they seemed to think that they could use Darwinism as an excuse for their already present racist views.
In the mean time genetics has shown that there aren't any human races.
And where did Hitler get his ideas from? His racism and anti-semitism? Not from science. As far as is documented he never mentioned evolution, genetics, natural selection, Darwin, etc. He was not influenced by social darwinian at all. No, that was something from England.
Hitler himself is very clear about the origin of his racist views. And his influences are people like Martin Luther, who was also an antisemite.
Hitler used religion, not Darwinism, as an excuse for his antisemitism, Quotes are numerous, but maybe this one is one of the most famous ones:
Hence today I believe that I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator: by defending myself against the Jew, I am fighting for the work of the Lord (Hitler 1943, 65).He believed in the divine right to exterminate the Jews.