Catarrhines are not correctly referred to as monkeys since not all Catarrhines are monkeys.
Ive already shown you a
couple sources saying
they are. But I can always show you more.
B.2. Anthropoids
The anthropoid primates are divided into New World (South America, Central America, and the Caribbean Islands) and Old World (Africa and Asia) groups. New World monkeyssuch as marmosets, capuchins, and spider monkeysbelong to the infraorder of platyrrhine (broad-nosed) anthropoids. Old World monkeys and apes belong to the infraorder of catarrhine (downward-nosed) anthropoids. Since humans and apes together make up the hominoids, humans are also catarrhine anthropoids.
--Encarta Human Evolution
I can see how we might say that some ancient prosimian might not be considered a monkey "yet", but how do you determine when a Pliopithecine has evolved to the point that it isn't a monkey anymore? Is that even possible?
The question is not only relevant, its critical, almost pivotal. Now please answer it.
You seem to be assuming that your preferred taxonomy is THE taxonomy, and I have yet to see that this is the case.
You will when you stop dodging important questions. And it is not only my taxonomy.
http://www.biosci.ohio-state.edu/~wenzel/cladistics.htm
"Since the 1960s a trend called cladistic taxonomy or cladism has emerged as a rival to more traditional phylogenetic classification. In this approach taxa are identified with clades, i.e. they can only be monophyletic. In these approaches, the ranking system in Linnaean taxonomy is often not used. A new formal code of nomenclature, the PhyloCode is currently under development, but many of its rules are in conflict with established codes of nomenclature (both for plants and animals), and it is unclear how the different codes will coexist."
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/enc1/scientific_classification
Old World monkeys are part of the Catarrhini, but in a branch distinct from the Old World apes.
And where does Propliopithecoidea fit into this scheme of yours?
As a sister group as I have supported a couple of times now and as is shown even in the links you have provided..
Yes, exactly! Propliopithecoidea is a sister clade of Old World monkeys which are commonly recognized as such- and which are entirely extinct except for apes. So, even if you adhere only to the traditional definition of monkey, apes still evolved from them.
I've seen articles from university level primatology studies that lump apes and Old World monkeys together, and distinguish them both -collectively- from the alternate group of New World monkeys. They do this even if they've already classified the whole lot under the heading of monkeys.
That was not a university level primate study, for one thing, it is a companion website for a college course.
That wasnt the source I was talking about. I cant find that anymore. I just used this site because it also came from a university, and said the same thing.
But nonetheless, that site also provides a series of general primate features which do not include the derived chartacters you mention. So again, it is an arbitrary classification.
Again, it is not. And it doesnt need to list all of the characters I mentioned, does it? I mean, if Im more detailed than the site wishes to be, that shouldnt disqualify it, should it?
In addition, simply looking at the heading (really, the title of a slide) is hardly the best way to interpret taxonomy. Even under that heading of monkey, the author clearly makes a distinction between apes and monkeys.
Nearly all of these sites do, just as they all distinguish between apes and humans too even when they describe the latter as one of the former.
The implication is inescapable even when there is a concentrated effort not to use the word "monkey" in a context which includes apes. And that's especially odd since the general public commonly recognizes chimpanzees and gorillas as "monkeys". If they are not monkeys, then what is the difference between them?
Frankly, I could not care less what the general public thinks. Much of the general public believes that the sun moves around the earth.
I didnt ask the general public, did I?
There are a number of anatomical features that distinguish apes from monkeys, and the ancestors of both were neither. Again, wanting to call humans monkeys is an arbitrary decision.
Again, no it is not. And again, you dodged the question. Why do you keep doing this?
Let me share with you what my definition for monkey is. This is a composite of all the available definitions Ive come across over the years, and recently updated.
As with all taxons, start with a description of the parent clade as a template, and add the distinguishing features:
Anthropoidea (monkeys) a subset of Haplorhini, have only two actual breasts, pectoral mammae, unlike those of any other mammal. And unlike lemurs, monkeys have lost or severely reduced their ability to move their ears. Only a few individuals remain who can even wiggle them anymore. Monkeys also lack the specialized sensory whiskers and the wet nose that lemurs and so many "lesser" animals have. Among the other obvious external differences are that male monkeys' genetalia are naked and pendulous in that they're not thethered to their abdomens anymore, as they are on most other eutherians. And their lips are quite mobile and expressive, as they're no longer tethered to the underlying gum. Unlike lemuroids, monkeys generally have a flatter face, and all monkeys have completely forward-facing binocular eyes and trichromatic vision, meaning that monkeys can see in color where lemurs, and most other "lesser" mammals can't. All monkeys have other internal distinctions from prosimians too. They all have a well-developed caecum, which is a sort of distension in the digestive tract that is mildly advantageous. But they have detrimental mutations too. All anthropoids have lost the ability to synthesize either vitamin D3 or vitamin C, and need to supplement both of these in their diet or they'll succumb to a condition of malnutrition commonly known as scurvy.
Now, if you want to get specific, start with Anthropoidea as the next template, and add to that the traits for either of its daughter clades. Thats how systematic classification works, and it is replacing your out-moded traditional method.
Because what the chart above is showing me is something like this: Imagine a Latin-speaking country. Early on, one group runs off and over time, their language evolves into Spanish. Later on, some of the remaining Latin speakers run off and evolve thier language into French. OK, I can accept that so far. But then you want me to believe that, at some point after both of these divisions, the remaining Latin tongue also evolves into Spanish, so that the Spanish language erupted twice and not as a result of any co-mingling, and without any of the French speakers already having spoken Spanish at some point. This is why paraphyletic origins don't happen in evolutionary phylogenies.
Um, no, that is not what I want you to believe.
Imagine a Latin-speaking country.
Our parable for anthropoids, got it.
Early on, one group runs off and over time, their language evolves into Spanish.
That accounts for the divergence of Platyrrhines. OK, still with ya.
Later on, some of the remaining Latin speakers run off and evolve their language into French.
That would be the apes in this parable. OK.
Neither Spanish nor French ARE Latin.
Neither the Platyrrhines nor the Hominoids are Anthropoids?
The Latin speakers die out over tiome, or undergo further migrations and adopt other new languages.
Leading to Cercopiths, just as I said. OK.
The original Latin speaking population is extinct.
Anthropoids are extinct?
What you want us to believe is that it is proper to consider the French and Spanish speaking populations to be speaking Latin.
Wait a minute. (translating into the parable) What I want you to believe is that it is proper to consider the apes and New World monkeys to be anthropoids?! Well, yes I do. But, just as Spanish and French are both Latin-based, (modified from the Latin template) I say that each of these groups are modified anthropoids, modified monkeys, if you will. Because what you somehow completely missed was the point that Spanish [monkeys] could not have evolved twice independently. It had to be monophyletic, one original Spanish monkey which then diverged to beget the latter Spanish/monkey group as well.