S
severus68
Guest
Is there any difference between a chimpanzee and a human?
Yes. I like chimpanzees much, much better.
Miz
Is there any difference between a chimpanzee and a human?
Yes. I like chimpanzees much, much better.
Miz
I have pondered on the 98% sharing of DNA with humans and the aggressiveness of chimps. I then found out that the bonobos share 99% of DNA withhumans and they are less aggressive.Unless they rip your face off. You did hear about the woman who lost her eyes and her face to a chimpanzee attack. BUT I do believe that the blame for that incident falls on the misguided owner of that animal. The chimpanzee was given sedatives or other medication prior to the attack by the owner who was having difficulties with the behavior of the specific animal.
Yes I like animals tooâBUT they are NOT human, and we really do have to take this into consideration in our exchanges and interactions with them. (But because they are different from us does not give us the right to be cruel to them, or to treat them as commodities.)
From an anthropological point of view this is a non-nonsensical question. Humans developed along a whole different line than chimpsâŚalthough it is thought that we share a common ancestor somewhere on the time continuum. Chimps donât create religion or tough moral questionsâŚor wonder why the stars shine âŚor seek to discover a cure for cancerâŚthey do not have âcultureâ. They also donât decide to have abortions, or make war, or do a hostile âtakeoverâ of a company or decide to âlay offâ thousands of workers to save money or euthanize those that are deemed âa burdenâ to societyâŚor blow up airplanes in the name of âreligionâ. Given this list, are humans really the pinnacle of creation? Sometimes I wonderâŚâIs there any difference between a chimpanzee and a human?"
In addition to looks?
Donât laughâŚâŚ
I have been doing some serious thinking about my cousin chilly chimp, the one related to humans on the evolutionary tree. During a previous discussion about humans and primates belonging to the same biological classification, a comment was made about what it would feel like to have the nature of a primate. I took that literally. Consequently, I imagined what an animalâs nature would be like; for example, the nature of a naked ape which of course is a chilly chimp.
SeriouslyâŚâŚ
The human species is being assaulted left and right. Beautiful human nature, both corporeal and rational soul intimately unified, is hammered in the fine print of posts. Here one finds that a person is strictly a biological animal, made of matter, which differs by degrees from the rest of the branches on the evolutionary tree.
In my humble opinion, one does not have to chop down the entire evolutionary tree to defend the glory of the human species. Some careful pruning here and there, as master gardeners know, will make a tree as strong as it is beautiful.
But first, one should recognize that the roots of the evolutionary tree are planted in the philosophical position that all reality is material. Naturally, the roots of science are in the material and physical realm. But that does not automatically eliminate the spiritual principle from inquiry as if it were non-existent. Unfortunately for human esteem and freedom, the crippled reasoning â that evolution occurs in living organisms; therefore all parts of living organisms have evolved â is unable to address the uniqueness of the human species.
Taking on the persona of cousin chilly chimp is only one sample of how one can pull the weeds out of current thinking. Consider raging forest fires as another example. What is the instinct of animal nature when faced with uncontrollable disaster? Would a chimpanzee deliberately set backfires? What do the actions of firefighters say about human nature?
SincerelyâŚâŚ
Do not let chilly chimp distract one from posting the serious questions about phylogenetic classification, assumptions, clades, hominids, beautiful music, founder effect, genetics, computer models, presumptions, intellect, and will.
The evolutionary tree needs the sunshine of reason, self reflection, logical evaluation, and analytical thought.
While I dearly love cousin chilly chimp, I sincerely believe that it is time to return Homo sapiens to its proper place at the pinnacle of creation. I flat out refuse membership in the brute animal kingdom.
This threadâs question remains. Is there any difference between a chimpanzee and a human?
Blessings,
granny
All human life is worthy of profound respect from the moment of conception.
Unless they rip your face off. You did hear about the woman who lost her eyes and her face to a chimpanzee attack. BUT I do believe that the blame for that incident falls on the misguided owner of that animal. The chimpanzee was given sedatives or other medication prior to the attack by the owner who was having difficulties with the behavior of the specific animal.
Yes I like animals tooâBUT they are NOT human, and we really do have to take this into consideration in our exchanges and interactions with them. (But because they are different from us does not give us the right to be cruel to them, or to treat them as commodities.)
Your post ties together some major points of this thread and ends in a question we all have to answer regardless if we are theists or non-theists.From an anthropological point of view this is a non-nonsensical question. Humans developed along a whole different line than chimpsâŚalthough it is thought that we share a common ancestor somewhere on the time continuum. Chimps donât create religion or tough moral questionsâŚor wonder why the stars shine âŚor seek to discover a cure for cancerâŚthey do not have âcultureâ. They also donât decide to have abortions, or make war, or do a hostile âtakeoverâ of a company or decide to âlay offâ thousands of workers to save money or euthanize those that are deemed âa burdenâ to societyâŚor blow up airplanes in the name of âreligionâ. Given this list, are humans really the pinnacle of creation? Sometimes I wonderâŚ
CC
[sign]I love my German Shepherd[/sign]
Please check these two links âChimpanzees and other primates have been taught to use sign language and are very intellegent creatures. Verbal communication is the thing that separates us from the animal worldâand I suspect that the reason for this is MORE than just biology.
I just briefly looked at theseâand at first glance was pretty unimpressed by this authorâbut am unfamiliar with him and who knowsâmaybe if I spent more time reviewing his work I might change my mind about him. He seems very biasedâto the point that raises suspicion.Please check these two links â
http://drbonnette.com/Ape-Language_Studies_Part_I.html
http://drbonnette.com/Ape-Language_Studies_Part_II.html
They are a fascinating two-part analysis of Ape Language studies.
Hi Marfran,Chimpanzees and other primates have been taught to use sign language and are very intellegent creatures. Verbal communication is the thing that separates us from the animal worldâand I suspect that the reason for this is MORE than just biology.
I think the difficulty is that some scientists do not recognize God in the equation, and statistically it seems that many âscientistsâ are not religious. I think science is most accurate if one is âunbiased,â but the problem with that is that the individual scientists, in eliminating âGodâ from their work, lose God from their lives.Hi Marfran,
Your comment here in post 105 is crucial to this thread. The links which I posted actually demonstrate what you are saying that verbal communication is the thing that separates us from the animal world. The links are an honest critique of methods not an attack on science. This is an important difference.
The links contain a valuable overview of known methods regarding language experiments. If there is a bias, it is for the human species. I can see some of what is wrong with the methods in the animal/human research. But it is far better to use detailed studies of methods. There are 82 references used in this study of methods.