I think you spend much of your time with like-minded individuals, Colton. I would be SHOCKED to find out that a third of Mormons believe humans evolved from other species. I would be shocked even if a third accepted that all species apart from humans went through the process. If we're talking about less established theories, like the various ideas on abiogenesis, I wonder if even 5% would accept such a proposal.
That's the problem with religion. If everyone was like you or Babe, then it would be pretty pedantic of me to object to faith. It would indeed be a personal perspective on ontological questions that does not directly related to observed phenomena. But I don't think that's the case. I think faith makes acceptance of evidence a game of mental roulette. You randomly try to dismiss theories that do not match your preconceptions, unless your knowledge of the overwhelming evidence is too heavy to simply ignore.
I see a definitional difference on the meaning of "faith" at work here. What I would consider dogma, or a static set of rigid assertions, is sometimes called "faith" by some. The willful act of accepting a canonical view, perhaps standardized in some catechism by some priestly scholars or something comparable. When such a set of assertions contains one error, you would of course be right to reject it. I suspect human beings have never, and probably never will, generate a religious code that is without error. One set of LDS believers, probably a large majority, will hold that although we do not have such an errorless set of beliefs, we do have a kind and loving Father who does lead the LDS people through leaders inspired to our need, and that if we hold with that leadership, we will be led forward towards the day when we will be acceptable sons and daughters of God who can live with Him in eternity, and through eons of continued development, become just as our Father is.
A very few Mormons, like me, will not even attempt to claim that "leadership" is error-free, but will hold that whatever the errors and insufficiencies of leaders past, present or future, God will overrule all in our favor, and will claim us as His children on condition of our faith in Christ, and Christ's atonement for all sin--- which "sin" in my view ncludes sins of omission and all forms of ignorance.
Happily, I with awe and wonder observe even people in other religions being loved and accepted in general by those same principles, and when I see true worshippers of God loving God wholeheartedly and dedicating their lives to the service of others, or in any way lifting their fellow beings by teaching, example, and service, I have "faith" God will bring them as well as anyone into his realms of glory. Such would not preclude one day having opportunity for any of the essential religious rites designated as requirements for eternal progression.
For me, "faith" means something akin to "hope" and "love". It is describing a human capacity for progress, not a set of dogmatic assertions.