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06-13-2002, 07:18 AM | #11 | |
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However, the overall progression is clear, just as a tree with intertwining branches clearly supports its leaves with them. And, yes, you are trolling. It is laughable to imply that the totality of fossil and genetic evidence supporting humanity's evolution from (other) apes is somehow comparable to Piltdown and Nebraska Man. It's rather like claiming that the Dead Sea Scrolls are random beetle droppings on parchment. Unless you are unreasonably ignorant, you're doing this to needle "evolutionists". |
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06-13-2002, 07:21 AM | #12 |
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oops!
[ June 13, 2002: Message edited by: Oolon Colluphid ]</p> |
06-13-2002, 07:35 AM | #13 | ||||
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Shit Jack, is it that obvious?
Okay, so indulge me. This isn't "to needle evolutionists", it's to see how well creationist spin/argument can be put on stuff, and to see how easy it is to knock holes in such spin. Hence the initial anonymity. So far, you're all presupposing a troll (don't we normally beat the crap out of presuppositionalists? ), and not really answering. I'm also curious as to why someone who does know about 'evolutionist' claims has to automatically be a troll. Doubtless, then, people like Gish would qualify, despite (presumably) honestly holding their beliefs, though dishonestly (for certain) promoting them. [Creationist ON] Quote:
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Are you saying there really are loads of complete hominid fossils? That most of what there is isn’t mostly scraps? Count hominoids in too, and you’ve got, what, another small box full? How is it improbable that Turkana boy is not just an abnormal sapiens? Are any of its features so vastly outside the modern range that it has to be a separate species? How do you know he couldn’t have interbred with us (the definition of species, no?)? just being different doesn’t make him transitional! And as for Lucy, it doesn’t matter that some of her features are human-like. Chimps are more human-like than orangs, but they’re still different things. Why is she not just an extinct chimp species? Quote:
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CT |
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06-13-2002, 08:22 AM | #14 | |
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scigirl |
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06-13-2002, 08:27 AM | #15 | ||||||||
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Personally, I *wouldn't* call Gish a troll, but perhaps we differ in our definition of troll. I think Gish (or even Ham) are quite sincere in their beliefs, and are willing to defend them (however mistakenly), which excludes them from trolldom. [Creationist ON] (so why is there this gap in quoted material, so that I ahve to cut'n'paste from another window, and will probably mess up the codes and all?) Quote:
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There are several partial skeletons of hominids. There are about a dozen of Neanderthals alone. I can think of 7 Plio-Pleistocene partial hominid skeletons (including "Lucy" and KNM-WT 15000), although none as complete as those two (except, very probably, the australopithecine that is currently being extracted from the breccias of Sterkfontein). And if we include the Miocene forms (not that this would occur to *real* creationists)...I suppose it would depend on your definition of "small". I'm not sure I'd want to try to lift that box.... Quote:
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Sorry. |
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06-14-2002, 12:26 AM | #16 | |
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Mind you, the point of this exercise was to see how we’d react to a creationist who did know about these things. Sure, we’ve not found one so far, but someone like Gish may well know of these fossils... and would put a cretinist spin on it. How we reacted was to smell a rat, not to tackle the questions. Correctly, of course. What we need is a real creationist who really understands evolution... but I’d wager those are mutually exclusive concepts . But the ‘creationist fact’ (don’t laugh) remains that there is now a gap in the Miocene. Of course [Oolon ON] the real answer is that we are very very unlikely to ever have fossils of members of the actual ancestral population; fossils are more of a guide to what was around at the time, rather than us being literally Lucy’s great ^100,000 grandchildren. Which allows Proconsul back into the frame. This is precisely why things like KNM-ER 15000 are safely to be taken as representative rather than abnormal (you’ve missed Ed’s claiming this I think, Ergaster): fossils are most likely to be of average members, by definition. There’s most numbers of the middle range of morphology, so they’re most likely to be preserved. Hence to argue that all erectus and archaic sapiens fossils, with all their differences, are merely aberant modern forms, is farcical. Cheers, Oolon / CT |
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06-14-2002, 04:25 AM | #17 | ||||
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At a certain level of education in paleoanthropology, the assumption that fossils represent the "average" individual (unless there is compelling reason to believe otherwise--of which there is at least one example I can think of) is like the fact that humans walk on two legs: it is assumed (by professionals and advanced students) to be so self-evident that it hardly bears comment. Deb |
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07-16-2002, 11:41 AM | #18 |
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Oolon,
I think you are cool! You are a TRUE skeptic! |
07-17-2002, 01:57 AM | #19 | |
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Oolon |
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