There is no conflict. Your conflation of man’s body with his soul is the problem. Our physical selves are different from apes in degree. This is all that science can say.
We are different from apes in kind, because we possess an immortal soul, but that is out of the reach of science.
If this seems wrong to you, I’m sure He will listen, even if He might not be willing to change it for you.
Would you care to debate the nature of the soul and show just what it is that you think you know?
Your statement that says man is different in degree from apes in regard to his body, but is different in kind because of a soul, which science does not deal with, shows your total failure to understand the terms of the question being posed. When the distinctions I used are properly understood, and they are distinctions that have been frequently used by evolutionists and philosophers in discussing these kinds of issues, then you will see that your answer remains an impossible situation, like a square circle.
When the nature of the soul is properly understood, and its relation to the body, of which it is the substantial form and principle of life, then a difference in degree only of man’s body from apes cannot account for rational activity such as propositional speech.
The correct answer is not so simplistic as you have made it out to be. If it were, then decades of debate could have been avoided.
A rational soul cannot be the substantial form of a body that differs in degree only from other animals, or even if man is said to be different by a difference in
kind, but one that is
superficial. The latter is the neo-darwinian position. You have regressed from the advance in distinctions made by neo-darwinists over Darwin’s position.
You need to see that the difference in kind pertains to man as possessing an integrated nature, body and soul, not some Platonic man in which the dualism of body and soul is conceived as being of a dichotomous nature. This latter situation is what your answer actually entails even though you are absolutely unaware of it.
You can go back to my post in which I introduced descriptions of the differences. I briefly illustrated three types of differences, while leaving out a fourth difference, a difference in
kind that is
apparent only. Start over there and see what you can do to understand the nature of the problem for science and philosophy before attempting to answer the question.
So far, you are not even in the ball game.