Quote:
Originally Posted by Oleg Bach
Those hung up on equality of the species desperately want to devalue mankind and bring them down to mere monkeys...
I was never a monkey- life forms are all related in the fact that they are life forms...For those who want to believe their father was a ape- so be it- For those who want to believe they are of a cosmic and divine origin older than time- so be it.
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Of course YOU personally were never a monkey, and we also know that none of our recent ancestors ever were either. Why oh why do anti-Evolutionists always
glom onto this tired old line?
In fact, there was a now-well-demonstrated precursor organism to us all, of an early
lemur type mammal which branched out into the earlier ape-monkey precursor tribes, which didn't even resemble the modern ones, plus the precursors of us.
This is all quite well detailed, with transitional fossil remains in evidence, for anyone to study and learn. For the more recent ancestries in which we can find and do DNA genome mapping (the S. Africa Lucy link, for example, and the cross-continent traces of her original tribe's mRNA (mitochondrial RNA) that prove, absolutely, our heritage and migrational histories...
indisputable, in fact!) we need look no further.
But we certainly didn't just "
poof" from apes or lemurs into modern man, in three stages; a blonde-haired modern tall guy but with a lot of body hair, a prehensile tail and big teeth! Not like the idiotic Ray Comfort transitional missing-link Croc-o-Duck stupidity (surely you don't subscribe to
that level of banal thinking, do you, Oleg?). While pre-DNA genome mapping we had to speculate somewhat on the relative positioning of unearthed fossils, again, if we can find any DNA in them, we can now
exactly place them in their correct relative position.
Indisputably. Otherwise, we still have morphological trends we can use with great accuracy (femur length, hip bone shape, various other constantly morphing physical features and "find" location, plus the ancient bone and rock tools we also find in association with their bones) to place them into
the most likely order they probably appeared.
Then, finally, a simple DNA mapping of your own genome, and that of your parents, theirs and all their predecessors, plus your own offspring and perhaps even the follow-on grandkids to them, will all show, quite reliably, that we humans are indeed all genetically changing slightly over time. And when enough changes accumulate and perhaps provide some slight advantage(s) to some tribe or group, then,
voila, we have ongoing Evolution of the hominid species. QED.