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01-08-2002, 11:21 AM | #201 |
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What the article is saying is that even evolutionists believe that Neanderthal could speak.
I do not subscribe to the assumption of evolution, I was just showing what evolutionists have found out about Neanderthal. I could give you creationists web sites, but you would reject them out of hand. |
01-08-2002, 11:26 AM | #202 |
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If you believe what "the evolutionists" say about Neanderthal anatomy in regards to speech, why do you reject the other inferences they draw from that anatomy? They are competent to say the one but not the other?
You are trying to eat your cake and have it. |
01-08-2002, 11:34 AM | #203 |
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What the article is saying is that even evolutionists believe that Neanderthal could speak.
To be more precise, the article says that some scientists have published research suggesting that Neanderthals may have been capable of speech similar to ours. And it also includes information suggesting that the fossil record shows an evolution of speech capability from earlier Homo species into later Homo species, including Neanderthal and Sapiens. Once again, read it again, real slowly, mouthing the words if you have to. |
01-08-2002, 12:17 PM | #204 | |
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01-08-2002, 01:17 PM | #205 |
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Orpheus99:
Don't get the idea I'm picking on you or anything, this topic just interests me. The difference is a sence of "just is" and one of "why it is". Most animals don't have the ability to question or to wonder. Would that perhaps be better stated "Most animals don't appear to have the ability to question or to wonder?" For example, domestic cats don't recognize themselves in mirrors, but I'd be hard pressed to state as a fact that my cat doesn't question or wonder, or at least have some level of self-awareness. One problem I have with this is that we really don't know what's going on in animals' minds (hell, we're just now beginning to understand what's going on in ours). Since in general we can't communicate with other species, we can only speculate about what they may be thinking. |
01-08-2002, 08:28 PM | #206 |
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You Betcha: Neanderthals' anatomy is consistent with speech like that of modern humans. There is no reason why they were not capable of speech.
It is just another piece of evidence showing they were fully human, and not an ape-like creature. <a href="http://cogweb.ucla.edu/Abstracts/Wilford_98.html" target="_blank">http://cogweb.ucla.edu/Abstracts/Wilford_98.html</a> I realize that there are other studies that refute this theory, however there is no proof that Neanderthals do not have linguistic capabilities. I believe they did. Me: An interesting article (and better than I expected you to cite, I was expecting something from Jack Cuozzo). The research described in the article focused particularly on the width of the hypoglossal canal though which hypoglossal nerve fibers reach the tongue. So what might this mean? It may indicate that Neanderthals would have had sufficient nerve innervation to support complex tongue movement. However, if speech scientist Philip Lieberman is correct, the ability of the Neanderthal vocal tract to produce vowels was still reduced because the Neanderthal possessed a more general "mammalian" pharynx. I'm not aware that anyone is suggesting that Neanderthals were completely mute, but there is a lot of discussion as to whether Neanderthals could produce the rapid differentiated sound streams neccessary to support a complex syntactic spoken language. The difference would not have so much been between ugh! and the Gettysburg Address, as it might have been between "You! Go there! Wait!" verses "Franklin, go wait behind the horse shaped rock over by the three cedars while Brock and Britney run at the reindeer from downwind." The problem is, Neaderthal vocal tract anatomy, including the larynx, has to be inferred from hard skeletal structure, such as the hyoid bone mentioned in the article. The reason why there is a dispute in the first place, as I understand it, is that there are differences between modern human and Neanderthal skeletal anatomy. For myself, I suspend judgement on whether Neanderthals were capable of the phonologically diverse yet rapid speech characteristic of our species. Any reason, other than personal preference, why you feel confident in declaring your belief in a conclusion? You Betcha: We could also address the evidence that separates great apes from humans, thus, showing they are not related by common descent. Me: Give it a try. Go ahead. [ January 08, 2002: Message edited by: ksagnostic ]</p> |
01-08-2002, 10:42 PM | #207 | ||||
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You Betcha,
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<a href="http://phylogeny.arizona.edu/tree/eukaryotes/animals/animals.html" target="_blank">http://phylogeny.arizona.edu/tree/eukaryotes/animals/animals.html</a> <a href="http://www.google.com/search?q=urbilateria+OR+urbilaterian" target="_blank">http://www.google.com/search?q=urbilateria+OR+urbilaterian</a> Quote:
-RvFvS |
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