Did apes descend from us?

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OK, I think I have, cannot see why not. Why can one not desire what one cannot know?

I’d like know what other universes exist, if any, outside our own. This is something I cannot know, yet I desire it. Is there a rule I missed stating I can’t desire such?

-TS
Perhaps this will help:


  1. *]Every natural, innate desire in us corresponds to some real object that can satisfy that desire.
    *] But there exists in us a desire which nothing in time, nothing on earth, no creature can satisfy.
    *]Therefore there must exist something more than time, earth and creatures, which can satisfy this desire.
    *]This something is what people call “God” and “life with God forever.”

    more…
 
Cladistically, taxonomically, anatomically, physiologically, molecularly, humans *are *apes. If apes did not exist and never had, then neither would we, because the particular clade that we belong to would not exist.
This refers to the phylogenetic system, a.k.a. evolutionary trees, which reconstructs evolutionary history of organismal lineages as they change through time. In contrast to the traditional Linnaean system, phylogenetic classification names only clades and proceeds from there. The website, Understanding Evolution, Berkeley, gives the example of a cladogram and then comments: “However, the reptiles do not form a clade, as shown in the cladogram. That means that either ‘reptile’ is not a valid phylogenetic grouping or we have to start thinking of birds as reptiles.” From this example, plus the Tree of Life Web Project, one observes that the process of classifying living organisms is an on-going process.

One should note that the concept of classifying nature did not begin with Carolus Linnaeus. One could go back to Aristotle who taught that each species had a unique “form” and could be classified by its functions. Aristotle developed a ladder-like hierarchy.

The point is that humans have changed the methods used to classify nature. The discovery of the archaea is a good example of knowledge being expanded by modern studies.

In other words, plants and animals do not wear name tags or security badges. Therefore, scientists rely on the tools of reason, logical evaluation, and analytical thought to classify and re-classify.

In my humble opinion, the heart of the “wolves” question should be addressed from the scientist’s point of view which is to examine the natural world as matter or material. This is how Charles Darwin discovered the theory of evolution. He took what he could see and what he could physically examine and formulated his thesis. Neo-Darwinists are doing the same thing. It should be obvious from looking at the history of natural classification systems that regardless if there are wolves, reptiles, etc. and no apes, the theory of modification could be organized to reflect the human species cladistically. This would be concluded from morphological, biochemical, gene sequence, and other evidence as the evolutionary theory claims that all organisms on earth are genetically related. From what I have read on the “evolutionary” websites, there is no physical or empirical evidence to the contrary.

Thus, the idea of the human species descending as part of the clade (the make-up of which is determined by scientists) which could possibly include wolves or reptiles is theoretically possible according to the basic formulation of the evolutionary theory.

Without going to a “special creation” in the middle of the evolutionary process, one can theorize that a clade contained a variety of matter or material, not necessarily in the exact formation of the current human being. As far as I can tell, there is no evidence suggesting that a pre-human had to look and act a certain way. We assume the pre-human’s looks because current great apes do resemble in numerous ways the human being. Genetics can, in part, confirm similarities. However, there is no evidence that cousin chilly chimp was the only organism that is similar in genomic structure. The available evidence can only say that chilly chimp is the only extant organism at this time.

Especially when one goes back in time to clades, there is no certainty of evidence linking the human species to a particular clade devised by current scientists. What we have is circumstantial evidence. As far as I am concerned, it is valid for scientists to use circumstantial evidence to define individual clades. Nonetheless, it must be maintained that while circumstantial evidence can lead to knowledge, it needs to be evaluated by human intellectual powers. Even then, certainty is not always possible.

Please note that I do recognize the genetic relationships between the human species and other living organisms because I believe in the unity of creation or as some others suggest in the unity of the “appearance” of life, the how of which has not been determined with complete certainty by any of the various methods used scientifically.

This reply to post 91 will be continued. 🙂
 
This refers to the phylogenetic system, a.k.a. evolutionary trees, which reconstructs evolutionary history of organismal lineages as they change through time. In contrast to the traditional Linnaean system, phylogenetic classification names only clades and proceeds from there. The website, Understanding Evolution, Berkeley, gives the example of a cladogram and then comments: “However, the reptiles do not form a clade, as shown in the cladogram. That means that either ‘reptile’ is not a valid phylogenetic grouping or we have to start thinking of birds as reptiles.” From this example, plus the Tree of Life Web Project, one observes that the process of classifying living organisms is an on-going process.

One should note that the concept of classifying nature did not begin with Carolus Linnaeus. One could go back to Aristotle who taught that each species had a unique “form” and could be classified by its functions. Aristotle developed a ladder-like hierarchy.

The point is that humans have changed the methods used to classify nature. The discovery of the archaea is a good example of knowledge being expanded by modern studies.

In other words, plants and animals do not wear name tags or security badges. Therefore, scientists rely on the tools of reason, logical evaluation, and analytical thought to classify and re-classify.

In my humble opinion, the heart of the “wolves” question should be addressed from the scientist’s point of view which is to examine the natural world as matter or material. This is how Charles Darwin discovered the theory of evolution. He took what he could see and what he could physically examine and formulated his thesis. Neo-Darwinists are doing the same thing. It should be obvious from looking at the history of natural classification systems that regardless if there are wolves, reptiles, etc. and no apes, the theory of modification could be organized to reflect the human species cladistically. This would be concluded from morphological, biochemical, gene sequence, and other evidence as the evolutionary theory claims that all organisms on earth are genetically related. From what I have read on the “evolutionary” websites, there is no physical or empirical evidence to the contrary.

Thus, the idea of the human species descending as part of the clade (the make-up of which is determined by scientists) which could possibly include wolves or reptiles is theoretically possible according to the basic formulation of the evolutionary theory.

Without going to a “special creation” in the middle of the evolutionary process, one can theorize that a clade contained a variety of matter or material, not necessarily in the exact formation of the current human being. As far as I can tell, there is no evidence suggesting that a pre-human had to look and act a certain way. We assume the pre-human’s looks because current great apes do resemble in numerous ways the human being. Genetics can, in part, confirm similarities. However, there is no evidence that cousin chilly chimp was the only organism that is similar in genomic structure. The available evidence can only say that chilly chimp is the only extant organism at this time.

Especially when one goes back in time to clades, there is no certainty of evidence linking the human species to a particular clade devised by current scientists. What we have is circumstantial evidence. As far as I am concerned, it is valid for scientists to use circumstantial evidence to define individual clades. Nonetheless, it must be maintained that while circumstantial evidence can lead to knowledge, it needs to be evaluated by human intellectual powers. Even then, certainty is not always possible.

Please note that I do recognize the genetic relationships between the human species and other living organisms because I believe in the unity of creation or as some others suggest in the unity of the “appearance” of life, the how of which has not been determined with certainty.

This reply to post 91 will be continued. 🙂
My bet is if we took the complete fossil record and had twenty scientists reconstruct it their would be twenty different renderings.
 
This is the continuation of post 100 which is in reply to Alec’s post 91.
… what makes you think that anyone would seriously propose recent human descent from a clade which is taxonomically remote as canines? If no great apes had survived, cladistic analysis of extant species would nest humans with old world monkeys as our closest living relatives, not canines. But all this is fantasy, because we have found ancient hominins and Miocene apes.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
Regarding a clade which is taxonomically remote as canines:
In addition to my comments in post 100, remote needs to be placed in the context of the various estimates of the age of the earth and consequently the age of the human species. Without a “special creation” in the middle of the evolutionary process, the evolutionary theory traces all living organisms back to the root or their roots. Thus it is possible to theorize that the basic material elements of the human species go way, way back, maybe back past the reptiles.

Regarding “nesting” humans:
The concept of nested hierarchies as the order of nature is the basis of the Linnaean system which has been replaced by the phylogenetic classification but not totally. It is my understanding that some of the titles, etc. have been reused. So I will not quibble about nesting. Nonetheless, it illustrates that classifications, regardless if they contain clades or kingdoms, are devised by humans and often change or evolve according to new studies.

I do not agree that the “wolves” exercise should be classified as dismissible fantasy. In my humble opinion, such creative thinking along scientific lines – phylogenetic classification is science, is it not? – could very well lead to a better, deeper understanding of the human species.

Blessings,
granny

The quest for knowledge is worthy
of the adventures and misadventures of the journey.
 
You miss the point. Cladistically, taxonomically, anatomically, physiologically, molecularly, humans *are *apes. If apes did not exist and never had, then neither would we, because the particular clade that we belong to would not exist.
Alec
evolutionpages.com
This is truly Clintonesque. Your proposition, then, is actually “if humans (being apes) did not exist, neither would we”. That has nothing to do with any of your other explanations. You simply are presenting a tautology as if it proves anything.
 
Perhaps you should just read the work.

The answers to many of these questions are to be found in Suwa et al, Paleobiological Implications of the Ardipithecus ramidus Dentition, Science 326, 94 - 99 and in the papers cited in that one. The conclusions of progressive reduction in upper canine size, change in canine morphology, the loss of honing in the CP3 complex which begin with Miocene apes and continue through Orrorin tungenensis, Sahelanthropus tchandensis, Ar kadabba, the australopithecenes and Homo to modern humans is robustly evidenced. Combining that with observations about timing of canine eruption in Ar ramidus, extant apes and extant humans, and simultaneous reductions in sexual dimorphism and observations that an enhanced UC is critical to sexual success in Pan troglodytes and other primates, leads to the reasonable hypothesis that a large UC and honing in CP3 complex (along with sexual dimorphism) are conserved in conditions of physical male-male sexual competition and have been lost in the human lineage by relaxed selection.

Sexual selection does not just mean mate selection as you seem to think, but also (in fact primarily) includes traits deriving from male-male sex-related conflict, as in this case. **And what does this mean? Are you saying the guys with big teeth killed each other off, so that the meek inherited the earth? What? Are you actually suggesting that any male animal is more deadly to other males than are humans? **

Oh, and did you miss the point that Ar ramidus pre-dates tool use by 2.5 million years? **Prove it. Failure to find obvious tools with the fragments of fossilized bone they found does not prove they didn’t have tools. **
Well there are natural variations within any species in any parameter that you care to measure, and some can be shown to be selected for (for example skin pigmentation) and others represent no more than random drift. But differences become important from an evolutionary point of view when they fall outside the intraspecific range. In the case of the male UC, modern human crown height ranges from 7 to 10mm, Ar ramidus from 9 to 12mm, in chimpanzee from 13mm to 19mm and in gorilla from 18 to 26mm. Even more significantly the difference between male and female in humans is 4% to 9%, in Ar ramidus from 10% to 15% and in modern great apes from 19% to 47%.
Well, I don’t think this hypothesis is as simplistic as you represent it if you read the work, but in any case you need to look at the food carrying capabilities of apes, not just any animal. **Leopards can carry a lot more food than we can, and climb trees with it to boot. If food carrying capabilities were important enough to force evolutionary changes, ar ramidus could have found a much more efficient thing into which to develop. **
No, specimens representing about 35 individuals from Aramis, with a minimum of 14 individuals for both upper canine and upper second molar, plus seven individuals from another site. There is one partial skeleton and a number of fragments. That’s it.
A probable female because of the relative size of UC and post-cranium. ** Could be. Of course, modern forensic pathologists sometimes have trouble when they’re looking at a brand-new skeleton. But I’ll grant it’s probably female in the absence of any reason to believe otherwise. **

What you have shown is that your knowledge of the evidence and conclusions presented in the suite of research papers is wondrously thin. I recommend that you read the actual work before you leap in to criticise it. No, I propose that you actually prove your proposition, not just tell us to go read something that you feel is more persuasive than you have managed to be.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
When I was a freshman in high school taking Speech 1, the debate coach cautioned us that it is an illigitimate method of debate to simply cite some work and, in effect, tell the oponent to go look it up and become persuaded in the process. Besides being an unpersuasive method, it’s tacky. Using arcane “trade terms” in a discussion without explaining them is even more tacky.

When one poses a proposition in here, it is customary for them to bear the burden of proof or not pose the proposition.
 
This is truly Clintonesque. Your proposition, then, is actually “if humans (being apes) did not exist, neither would we”. That has nothing to do with any of your other explanations. You simply are presenting a tautology as if it proves anything.
Naw, it doesn’t prove anything other than that your scenario (if apes had never existed and never had then we would have descended from some other bizarrely groip) is meaningless. It’s like saying if felines did not and had never existed then we would have to posit that tigers descended from orca whales. Bonkers.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
Naw, it doesn’t prove anything other than that your scenario (if apes had never existed and never had then we would have descended from some other bizarrely groip) is meaningless. It’s like saying if felines did not and had never existed then we would have to posit that tigers descended from orca whales. Bonkers.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
Not at all. It is not important to those who do not believe in religion to taunt those who do with propositions like tigers descending from whales.

Never did I say humans descended from any group; bizarre or otherwise. Consequently, it is meaningless to respond to an argument never made. What I DID say, as a joke, was that evolutionary theory is so important to some that if apes (as most people consider them, which excludes humans) never existed the proponents would likely find some other animal to support a secular view of the origin of humanity.

I do not, and never did argue that evolution is a false theory. Might be entirely true, and it isn’t important to me whether it is or not. My argument, and my only one, was that it seems those who pose it often draw conclusions from the “evidence” that the evidence really doesn’t support. You admitted that yourself.
 
When I was a freshman in high school taking Speech 1, the debate coach cautioned us that it is an illigitimate method of debate to simply cite some work and, in effect, tell the oponent to go look it up and become persuaded in the process. Besides being an unpersuasive method, it’s tacky. Using arcane “trade terms” in a discussion without explaining them is even more tacky.
Look, you began this discussion by criticising the methods and conclusions of a substantial piece of research that has been published. In order for your criticism to have any merit whatsoever, a minimum criterion is that you have read and understood the work that you are seeking to criticise. This is not some obscure piece of research that I have dragged into the discussion that I have to explain, but is the very subject of the discussion that you initiated. Now it’s obvious from what you have posted that you are unaware of even the most basic findings, methods, reasoning and conclusions in the work that *you *have chosen to criticise, not to mention the fact that you misunderstand basic concepts of evolutionary biology such as sexual selection. If anyone’s method is tacky here, it is undeniably yours.
When one poses a proposition in here, it is customary for them to bear the burden of proof or not pose the proposition.
But you are the one that posed the proposition that hypotheses published in Science about Ar ramidus are unwarranted. It turns out that your opinion is based on an almost total ignorance of what those hypotheses are and how they are arrived at. How can it possibly be my responsibility not only to explain the contents of the work in detail to you, work which is, after all, in the public domain and that you began by criticising, but also to teach you the meaning of basic evolutionary concepts? As it is, I have gone to some trouble to explain some of the findings which are most relevant to the questions you asked, and to correct your misunderstanding of the meaning of sexual selection, all of which is specific solid content that you have avoided with these ridiculous charges. Basically you have been exposed for not knowing what you are talking about, hence your rather clumsy attempt to shift the debate from content to process and to shift the burden of evidence to me. It won’t wash.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
Look, you began this discussion by criticising the methods and conclusions of a substantial piece of research that has been published. In order for your criticism to have any merit whatsoever, a minimum criterion is that you have read and understood the work that you are seeking to criticise. This is not some obscure piece of research that I have dragged into the discussion that I have to explain, but is the very subject of the discussion that you initiated. Now it’s obvious from what you have posted that you are unaware of even the most basic findings, methods, reasoning and conclusions in the work that *you *have chosen to criticise, not to mention the fact that you misunderstand basic concepts of evolutionary biology such as sexual selection. If anyone’s method is tacky here, it is undeniably yours. Nice try, but no cigar. I said right up front that my source of information was a television program about it. What I said was that it is a stretch to conclude (and maintain that it’s “science”) that people walked upright as a consequence of the utility of food carrying, and even more to conclude that somehow that is responsible for human socialization. All you have done in response is to call me ignorant and tell me I cannot possibly understand anything without reading the published works of which you are so fond. My response to that is that I didn’t bring any of this up in the first instance. I didn’t initiate this post. But simply telling someone in a disagreement that he’s ignorant and that he needs to go read something, is simply not an effective argument. You have not carried your burden of persuasion.

But you are the one that posed the proposition that hypotheses published in Science about Ar ramidus are unwarranted. It turns out that your opinion is based on an almost total ignorance of what those hypotheses are and how they are arrived at. How can it possibly be my responsibility not only to explain the contents of the work in detail to you, work which is, after all, in the public domain and that you began by criticising, but also to teach you the meaning of basic evolutionary concepts? As it is, I have gone to some trouble to explain some of the findings which are most relevant to the questions you asked, and to correct your misunderstanding of the meaning of sexual selection, all of which is specific solid content that you have avoided with these ridiculous charges. Basically you have been exposed for not knowing what you are talking about, hence your rather clumsy attempt to shift the debate from content to process and to shift the burden of evidence to me. It won’t wash. ** Oh no. At no time did I mention whatever article in Science you are talking about. You keep citing it as if somehow doing that proves your proposition. You have not explained anything to anyone in here. If you feel it is beneath your dignity to introduce topics and then support them without resorting to insults, citations and field jargon , then perhaps you should be posting on an evolution blog, rather than in here. **
Alec
evolutionpages.com
If you had said, right up front, that evolutionary theory is your religion, which it seems to be, I probably would have just let it all go, since it is rarely a fruitful enterprise to argue religion with anyone.
 
If you had said, right up front, that evolutionary theory is your religion, which it seems to be, I probably would have just let it all go, since it is rarely a fruitful enterprise to argue religion with anyone.
I suppose you have evidence that hec’s belief in evolution constitutes religion? Unless of course you were just making an outrageous claim to avoid having to actually deal with his refutation.
 
I suppose you have evidence that hec’s belief in evolution constitutes religion? Unless of course you were just making an outrageous claim to avoid having to actually deal with his refutation.
I will be happy to deal with his refutation as soon as he makes one.

Perhaps I really was engaging in hyperbole in saying it is his religion. But normally, when one comes into a site entitled “Catholic Answers Forum” and does not make a proposition, but simply asserts a conclusion and cites his references without ever explaining why the proposition itself should be worthy of belief, and then follows on with insults, it’s usually some religious fundamentalist. Perhaps the striking similarity did lead me to think of it as “religion”; though it might not meet all peoples’ definitions of it on all fours.

Sometimes those folks come in here in “tag teams”. (oops, better not keep looking at similarities)
 
Actually Darwinism is accepted under religion in the Canadian census. It is absurd – it is a scientific theory.
I would not deny that there is a lot of science to it. There are also lots of leaps of faith. The Canadians are only half wrong.
 
Actually Darwinism is accepted under religion in the Canadian census. It is absurd – it is a scientific theory.
Not really - evolutionism is a philosophy turned dogmatic qualifying as a religion although religion means to bind to God so it really isn’t. HUH…😃
 
I will be happy to deal with his refutation as soon as he makes one.

Perhaps I really was engaging in hyperbole in saying it is his religion. But normally, when one comes into a site entitled “Catholic Answers Forum” and does not make a proposition, but simply asserts a conclusion and cites his references without ever explaining why the proposition itself should be worthy of belief, and then follows on with insults, it’s usually some religious fundamentalist. Perhaps the striking similarity did lead me to think of it as “religion”; though it might not meet all peoples’ definitions of it on all fours.

Sometimes those folks come in here in “tag teams”. (oops, better not keep looking at similarities)
Performing an action with religious fervor is not the same as practicing a religion.
 
Performing an action with religious fervor is not the same as practicing a religion.
Depends, I guess, on how one defines “religion”. Classic Buddhism, for example, does not bear a lot of the earmarks of what most of us think of as a “religion”, but it’s generally considered one just the same. But I understand the point.
 
Actually Darwinism is accepted under religion in the Canadian census. It is absurd – it is a scientific theory.
Either you are lying, or you have been lied to.

The 2001 census had the following choices in religion:

Catholic
Protestant
Christian Orthodox
Christian not included elsewhere
Muslim
Jewish
Buddhist
Hindu
Sikh
Eastern religions
Other religions
No religious affiliation

Source: www40.statcan.ca/l01/cst01/demo30a-eng.htm

The** 2006** Census had no question on religion as the question is only asked once every 10 years.

Source: chass.utoronto.ca/datalib/censusq.htm

The 2011 questions will not not be submitted to cabinet for finalization until Spring of 2010.

Source:www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/reference/consultation/92-136/contentdeterminationprocess.cfm

There are no proposed changes to the religion questions being recommended by Statistics Canada.

Source:www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/reference/consultation/92-136/proposedchanges.cfm

So… no it isn’t.
 
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