No, you don't. You expend thousands of words in here making perfectly clear the fact that you do not understand the difference between an assumption and a conclusion, you do not understand the philosophical and scientific terms you throw around, and you are in denial about the breadth of evidence for human-ape common ancestry.
You have your nerve, you have used evolution, natural selection, metaphysics and a priori without the slightest clue what those words mean. I do understand those terms and I read the scientific literature about the genetic basis of human-chimp common ancestory. This is what I am getting from my reading, by the way, what do you read?
Human evolution is characterized by a dramatic increase in brain size and complexity. To probe its genetic basis, we examined the evolution of genes involved in diverse aspects of nervous system biology. (Accelerated Evolution of Nervous System Genes in the Origin of Homo sapiens, Cell, Vol. 119, 1027–1040, December 29, 2004)
As a species, we pride ourselves on the uniqueness of our brain. Relative to our body size, the human brain is bigger than that of any other animal. It may also contain unique structures and patterns of organization that presumably underlie our intelligence and ability to manipulate our environment. But how did our unique brain originate, and under what selective pressures did it evolve? (Molecular Insights into Human Brain Evolution, Nature 1999)
The developmental and evolutionary mechanisms behind the emergence of human-specific brain features remain largely unknown. However, the recent ability to compare our genome to that of our closest relative, the chimpanzee, provides new avenues to link genetic and phenotypic changes in the evolution of the human brain. We devised a ranking of regions in the human genome that show significant evolutionary acceleration. Here we report that the most dramatic of these 'human accelerated regions', HAR1, is part of a novel RNA gene (HAR1F) that is expressed specifically in Cajal–Retzius neurons in the developing human neocortex from 7 to 19 gestational weeks, a crucial period for cortical neuron specification and migration. HAR1F is co-expressed with reelin, a product of Cajal–Retzius neurons that is of fundamental importance in specifying the six-layer structure of the human cortex. HAR1 and the other human accelerated regions provide new candidates in the search for uniquely human biology. (An RNA gene expressed during cortical development evolved rapidly in humans, Nature 16 August 2006)
You remember the last one don't you? No wait, you never read it you just started a thread about it and refused to discuss it. You just chanted some mindless drival about natural selection did it with random mutations which the researchers realized was highly improbable.