0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
To a greater or lesser extent all those "points" just mean that we (uniquely) have a big complex brain.It's no more difficult to see how a big brain can evolve than a long neck as per the giraffe.
In the meantime rather than writing "The foregoing shows that there is nothing to indicate human common descent from a common ancestor of any description." perhaps you can come up with an alternative explanation for the fact that we share nearly all our DNA with chimps and about half with bananas.
So, you didn't see the word "complex" in my post or did you just ignore it?The examples you give are all related, some more closely than others.
Physical similarity isn't a reliable guide to kinship (though it's often quite good). That's exactly why taxonomists generally rely on DNA evidence these days.
I take it that you are also unaware that modern wheat has 3 times as many chromosomes as it's ancestors and does really rather well.
Quote from: blakestyger on 03/10/2008 09:28:38Asyncritus - you've missed one out. How about: Man is the only creature with the ability to present vacuous arguments.Yeah, and you're a prime example of that aren't you? []
Asyncritus - you've missed one out. How about: Man is the only creature with the ability to present vacuous arguments.
- highly enlightened in every way.
You are suggesting that Humans are the ultimate species, we are not. We are the best, so far, in our realm and our realm only. Sharks are infinitely better than humans in their realm. You cannot compare ability or suitability between different species.
Is there any solid evidence at all that, among all these many branching-offs, another creature even looks like evolving into what man is - highly enlightened in every way. And if not, why the heck not? I don't want speculation, just some facts. Because it just ain't happening the way science says it happens.
Because it just ain't happening the way science says it happens.
If it happens at different speeds for different species, what is the mechanism that has made it happen faster for humans than other beings.
These are questions that need to be answered before evolution gets to earn anything more than the label of "primitive theory", itself in need of quick "evolution".
Actually, no, they're not. These are your questions based on a misunderstanding of evolution and a strange notion that everything 'wants' to be like a human. Also, your idea that being human is the peak of evolution. Every species alive right now is the peak of its own evolution. I'm afraid that regardless of your opinions, evolution is already a very well accepted and defined theory.
Why has no other creature developed in this way if we are all on the same planet, facing more or less the same environmental pressures and subject to the same so-called laws of evolution.