I see that you still do not understand evolution. By the way, a species always is part of its ancestral group. That is why you are still an ape.
No, I'm a human. I don't see any apes building computers or skyscrapers, btw.
Simply put, the proponents of the ruling theory tell us that we are all undoubtedly intelligent enough to fully grasp their theory, as long as we concur with it. But we are nothing but totally unqualified outsiders if we raise critical questions concerning any of its basic tenets, or if we come to the conclusion that it is mostly wrong.
Darwin imagined the origin of species (and, in fact, of all life forms) by selection of “infinitesimally small changes,” “infinitesimally slight variations,” and “slow degrees.”
"For natural selection can act only by taking advantage of slight successive variations;
she can never take a leap, but must advance by the shortest and slowest steps,” or “the transition [between species] could, according to my theory, be effected only by numberless small gradations” (emphasis added). Virtually the same is said by neo-Darwinists today.
How many transitional links are then required on the assumed evolutionary road to humans? How many, in fact, must actually and historically have existed during the last approximately 17 million years of geologic time, as stipulated for the last common ancestor of humans and great apes?
Well, on the basis of the ruling theory: Certainly millions!
And let's not forget, there should also be infinite numbers of intermediate links
on the extinct side branches.
Even on the neo-Darwinian presuppositions of evolution by mutation and selection, it has not been possible to document and prove the essentially assumed
gradual process of man’s origin.
Ian Tattersall (Professor and Head of the anthropological department of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City from 1971 to 2010; now curator emeritus):
"We differ from our closest known relatives in numerous features of the skull and of the postcranial skeleton, in important features of brain growth, and almost certainly in critical features of internal brain organization as well. These differences exist on an unusual scale. At least to the human eye, most primate species don’t differ very much from their closest relatives. Differences tend to be largely in external features such as coat color, or ear size, or even just in vocalizations; and variations in bony structure tend to be minor. In contrast, and even allowing for the poor record we have of our closest extinct kin,
Homo sapiens appears as distinctive and unprecedented. Still, we evidently came by our unusual anatomical structure and capacities very recently:
There is certainly no evidence to support the notion that we gradually became what we inherently are over an extended period, in either the physical or the intellectual sense."
Bernard Wood:
"Even with all the fossil evidence and analytical techniques from the past 50 years, a convincing hypothesis for the origin of
Homo remains elusive."
Jeffrey H. Schwartz (Professor of Anthropology at the University of Pittsburg, past President of World Academy of Art and Science):
"[W]e should not expect to find a series of intermediate fossil forms with decreasingly divergent big toes and, at the same time, a decreasing number of apelike features and an increasing number of modern human features."
Professors John D. Hawks, Keith Hunley, Sang-Hee Lee, Milford Wolpoff (
"…no gradual series of changes in earlier australopithecine populations clearly leads to the new species [
Homo sapiens], and no australopithecine species is obviously transitional. This may seem to be an unexpected statement, because for 3 decades habiline species have been interpreted as being just such transitional taxa, linking
Australopithecus through the habilines to later
Homo species."
We, like many others, interpret the anatomical evidence to show that early
H. sapiens was significantly and dramatically different from earlier and penecontemporary australopithecines21 in virtually every element of its skeleton and every remnant of its behavior.
…Our interpretation is that
the changes are sudden and interrelated and reflect a bottleneck that was created because of the isolation of a small group from a parent australopithecine species. In this small population, a combination of drift and selection resulted in a radical transformation of allele frequencies, fundamentally shifting the adaptive complex"(Wright 1942); in other words,
a genetic revolution...
I can go on, but you perhaps can understand why I'm a skeptic, or an non believer when it comes to this fairly tale. I think I just come to these threads to be amused at agnostics and athiests blind Faith in this tale they've been told.