A sentence from a book review is cited as evidence of the author's support for a supposed particular evolutionary hypothesis?
It certainly can't be interpreted to support your position, now can it?
How about this from the book description:
"Taking us back roughly 45 million years into the Eocene, "the dawn of recent life," Chris Beard, a world-renowned expert on the primate fossil record, offers a tantalizing new perspective on our deepest evolutionary roots. In a fast-paced narrative full of vivid stories from the field, he reconstructs our extended family tree, showing that the first anthropoids--the diverse and successful group that includes monkeys, apes, and humans--evolved millions of years earlier than was previously suspected and emerged in Asia rather than Africa. "
In this thread, both Cirbryn and I have referred to humans
and apes, even though we both say that humans
are apes. I have no problem with the fact that others do this too.
it seems that
J. G. Fleagle (another one of SLP’s chosen authorities) agrees that monkeys, apes, and ‘ultimately’ humans all descend from what is only described here as a monkey. I believe SLP stated that this fact alone would be sufficient to prove him wrong.
No sir. You forget yourself, and what you said in post #73.
Aron-Ra said:
If Old World monkeys share a common ancestor with apes, and that common ancestor shared another common ancestor with New World monkeys, then apes have to be monkeys of some sort themselves.
SLP said:
If, and only if, the stem ancestor was a ‘monkey’.
Then in post #114, you cited Delson and Fleagle as the authority sources who's positions you would accept. Both of these men, and many others cited in this thread have described all of the non-hominoid anthropoids in the fossil record as "monkeys". They've also labeled them as ancestors of the Hominoids so that there is no option but that apes descended from monkeys, and therefore are monkeys still both by definition and derivation, just like I said. You set the goal. Are you going to stand by your word? Or are you going to backpeddle?
but your obsession with 'proving' me wrong is quite flattering.
You flatter yourself much too much. I have no such obsession. I'm trying to make a point, and you're trying to misunderstand it, that's all.
I don't consider myself the ultimate authority on such matters - I was blessed (cursed?) with a streak of humility -
Hardly, your caustic conduct throughout this thread was a result of your vanity being injured. You felt slighted when no offense was ever intended, and wouldn't have been perceived, except by one who was very vain.
so I rely on those whose professional histories include a track record of peer reviewed publications on the relevant subjects to provide frameworks within which I can draw conclusions.
Here is another example of your humility, since you delight in rejecting my arguments -unconsidered- because I lack the publications you boast.
Such professionals have indicated that, at best, the issue is unresolved.
Which logically means that you and I are on equal ground then, yes? Thank you for finally granting my contention a position of equal footing with yours. Or did you mean to imply that it is unresolved with all the peer-reviewed professionals on one side, and the "arm-chair experts" like Delson on the other?
So, I prefer functional, relevant taxonomies rather than ego-driven fantasies premised on preferred evolutionary histories and a haphazard use of terminology.
But that is just me.
No, its me too. That's why I object to your ego ego-driven fantasies premised on preferred evolutionary histories and a haphazard use of terminology; things like New World monkeys and Old World monkeys stemming from a common ancestor with Parapithecid monkeys, but an ancestor which somehow wasn't a monkey itself, but was a "monkey-like" lemurroid tarsier, or a 'primate', any word you can call it except what it is. That sounds pretty haphazard to me.
You have failed to provide any means of separating primates from mammals....nothing to reveal when a sarcopterygian descendant isn’t a sarcopterygian anymore...
See how that can work?
Yes, perhaps you're finally beginning to understand why we're still sarcopterygiians as well as monkeys and apes?
You may have been conditioned to think that describing humans as highly-specialized monkeys is absurd. But the fact remains that there is not one character shared by all of them that isn’t also shared by us. You certainly couldn’t produce any, nor will you ever be able to.
John Harshman showed me it couldn't be done. You're showing me the same thing.
I am curious - are there any characters that are shared by all Primates that are not possessed by monkeys?
Umm, no. Since monkeys are a subset of primates, then that is not possible. Are you still under the impression that calling apes a subset of monkeys is the same thing as calling monkeys a subset of apes?
Any characters shared by all mammals that are not possessed by Primates? Surely there must be some, lest we should simply say we are Mammals or we are all Primates.
Since primates are a subset of mammals, (and therefore still mammals as well as primates) then no, that would not be possible either.
I think I'm beginning to see the problem you're having with this concept. You seem to be missing the most fundamental basic. That's why I tried to illustrate that by reminding you that all ducks are birds, but that not all birds are ducks. Do you see the correlation there?
My sticking point in this 'discussion' is, and I stand by this characterization, the arbitrary (I *know* what it means. I *knew* what it means) nature of choosing 'monkey' as the stem from which to classify all extant Anthropoids as. Are there any characters shared by chimps, humans and gorillas that 'monkeys' do not possess?
Yes, that's why they're the subset, and not the other way around.
If so, why not use that clade/stem as the one from which to draw our 'name'?
Because the word, "simian", (and similar words in many languages) refers to monkeys in a monophyletic sense, including apes, and excluding humans only for the same reason the word 'animal' also excludes humans, by comparison, even though we know that we are animals too. The word, 'ape' however does not refer to the whole collective of Anthropoidea, but only to the subset of Hominoidea. One may also choose that name for our clade because it applies just as well. But in this discussion, we're trying to determine whether 'monkeys' are part of our lineage. So to stay on-topic, we can't be distracted by other clades besides the one already on the table.
So how would YOU classify ground-driven passenger transport vehicles that do not have 4 wheels or run on internal combustion engines?
Those are just the characters, and could be applied to any number of things. But if you're trying to define a car specifically, then you can't use that as your description because those characters do not include this car.
Nor would it include electric cars, solar cars and so on.
Would you employ a more general name that includes all such creatures?
Why? The word, 'car' already exists, and we know what it means.
Or would you provide a separate classification for 4-wheeled vehicles, one for 3-wheeled vehicles, etc.?
There is little point since all these are created rather than related. For them, polyphyly is possible. For evolving life-forms, it is not.