Strangely enough, Oderberg’s website makes no mention of his being a biologist. It says his field of education is philosophy. As such, I should advise you to take his lay person’s opinions on taxonomy with a pinch of salt.
The question of what is a correct taxonomy of things according to common descent is a question for an expert in biology to answer.
The question of what is a correct taxonomy of things according to ontology is a question for a philosopher.
I’ll have none of this scientism on my watch.
Also, the question of whether for any given question it is better to examine a question according to a classification according to common descent in biology or a classification according to ontology is a pre-scientific question, not strictly answerable within the purview of the science itself. It is, in other words, a question most correctly answer by philosophy.
I’m using the word animal in the context of a University education in taxonomy.
Which is not the sense in which I wish to use animal. If we are using the word in two different ways it does no good to insist that I use it
your way. After all, I’m using the word to refer to a reality. You are making this an argument over words rather than things. Argue about what I’m arguing about, not over what words I’m using.
No. Human beings are a species of ape.
Apes, to wit: Chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutangs and humans all share a common ancestor. All apes and monkeys are primates, and share a common ancestor. All primates are mammals, and with other mammals share a common ancestor. All mammals are animals, and with other animals we share a common ancestor. All animals are eukaryotes, and with other eukaryotes we share a common ancestor.
My apologies for the mix up. I really need to keep a reference to keep all this stuff straight.
My point, which is independent of my (failing) memory regarding biological taxonomy, is that it is a mistake to think that because species X, Y, Z can be grouped according to a category of common descent (say, they can all be called apes), that is that they are most closely related in terms of descent, that X, Y, Z are therefore most closely related in terms of ontology, or what they are.
Human beings are apes according to the biological classification which classifies in a taxonomy according to common descent. I have no problem with this. It is true. But it implies nothing whatsoever about the total status, ontologically, of human beings vis-a-vis other apes.
God bless,
Rob