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Loudmouth

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Absolutely not...the actual fossils are the actual fossils...some of what we see in "reconstructions" are added to and or enhanced....

Once again we have the empty allegations of wrongdoing.

This is perhaps the best evidence we have that these fossils are really transitionals. Your only argument against them is that they were faked. If they didn't look transitional you wouldn't have to use this argument.

the point that they are all being classified as Australopithecines is irrelevant to the discussion Doc and I were having. Saint Bernards and Shih tzu are both dogs, but not the same creature...we cannot rightly compare their jaw bones and make generalized associations that are species defining....Bernards and Shih tzu are different species (varieties) but not the same animal...Africanus and Sediba may be different species (varieties) of Australopithecus, but they are not the same...so it is also with Afarensis...

His assertion (from an apparently authoritative opinion) was that there were many A. Afarensis pelvi. Are there or are there not? If so show us...if not admit the mistake and we can move on...

The assertion is that they are transitional fossils. Do you have anything to suggest otherwise.
 
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Dr GS Hurd

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His assertion (from an apparently authoritative opinion) was that there were many A. Afarensis pelvi. Are there or are there not? If so show us...if not admit the mistake and we can move on...

You obviously ignored the ones I already cited, so I have done with you.
 
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DaisyDay

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Bernards and Shih tzu are different species (varieties) but not the same animal
No, St. Bernards and shih tzus are the same species & the same subspecies - dogs or Canis lupus familiaris - but different breeds. I don't know what you mean by "the same animal". Each animal is itself, I guess, but these are both dogs.
 
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pshun2404

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Once again we have the empty allegations of wrongdoing.

Just look at the previous presentations from both sides….10 to 20 % actual 80% imagined or assumed to be what they believe she “really” looked like (but that is assumption based because they really do not know)

The assertion is that they are transitional fossils. Do you have anything to suggest otherwise.

Oaky this is the third time I will tell you….the assertion (not your attempt to divert) was that there are many (or plenty of) Afarensis pelvic fossil samples…I asked to see some of them…

Dr. Gurd (one of the prominent anti-creationist apologists) could not provide them….not unlike unbackable assertions made by YEC’s (which I am not) if you ask me.

If you can provide them I would be glad to examine the photos…
 
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pshun2404

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You obviously ignored the ones I already cited, so I have done with you.

You did NOT provide them...show them here...not paper after paper to bog down the conversation (which I read and do not show any such thing)...

I must assume you cannot....
 
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pshun2404

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No, St. Bernards and shih tzus are the same species & the same subspecies - dogs or Canis lupus familiaris - but different breeds. I don't know what you mean by "the same animal". Each animal is itself, I guess, but these are both dogs.

Dear Daisy....I guess it depends o which EB you are speaking to...same bacteria where one is subject to anti-biotics another resistant (called different species)....the definition of the word "species" has become so vague it can be conveniently twisted to fit the need of the EB...Yes these dogs are members of the same family but they are two different varieties (imagine if all we had were a scarce selection of 1,000,000 year old fossils of each?)...Africanus and Sediba and Afarensis may or may not be the same "species" but we are talking here about "LUCY" so as much as you would like to drag this into other issues, please stick with Afarensis....if you know of MANY or PLENTY of A.Afarensis pelvic fossil examples please show them...

If you want to discuss "Australopithicene" in general or Africanus or Sediba specifically then fine we can do that as soon as you start a new thread that addresses that. You would be surprized to find I probably agree more with you than with the Ken Ham-ites
 
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Loudmouth

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Once again we have the empty allegations of wrongdoing.

Just look at the previous presentations from both sides….10 to 20 % actual 80% imagined or assumed to be what they believe she “really” looked like (but that is assumption based because they really do not know)

All we are asking is that you address the parts of the fossil that are there, such as the pelvis, upper pallet, brow ridges, and cranium bones (to name a few).

Oaky this is the third time I will tell you….the assertion (not your attempt to divert) was that there are many (or plenty of) Afarensis pelvic fossil samples…I asked to see some of them…

The assertion is that Lucy is transitional. Do you have anything to suggest otherwise? If you won't even address one fossil, why should we show you more?
 
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Dr GS Hurd

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You did NOT provide them...show them here...not paper after paper to bog down the conversation (which I read and do not show any such thing)...

You obviously did not read the papers I cited, or you have seen the photos you expect me to waste more time copying for you.
 
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pshun2404

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All we are asking is that you address the parts of the fossil that are there, such as the pelvis, upper pallet, brow ridges, and cranium bones (to name a few).

We have been discussing various parts of the LUCY fossil (go back and re-read if necessary)…are we done with the Afarensis Pelvis?

Okay since Doc could (or would) not show us any of the “many” or “plenty of”, and you could not as well, and neither could I (who certainly has looked extensively), then I am safe to assume there aren’t any available to us at this time and therefore we must go with the scanty few fragmented samples we have…

We discussed the skull, the femur, the general skeletal view, and now the pelvis…what feature of “LUCY” would you like to discuss next????

Paul
 
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Loudmouth

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We have been discussing various parts of the LUCY fossil (go back and re-read if necessary)

How did you determine that these parts are not transitional?

Okay since Doc could (or would) not show us any of the “many” or “plenty of”, and you could not as well, and neither could I (who certainly has looked extensively), then I am safe to assume there aren’t any available to us at this time and therefore we must go with the scanty few fragmented samples we have…

When you show that you can address one fossil, we will show you more. There is no reason to find more fossils for you to ignore.

We discussed the skull, the femur, the general skeletal view, and now the pelvis…what feature of “LUCY” would you like to discuss next????

I would like to discuss the criteria you used to determine that these features were not transitional
 
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pshun2404

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So Loudmouth, you asserted “Lucy” as transitional and asked if I thought she was. Well that depends on what you mean by that. I do not believe she is (or that it has been proven) transitional between Ape and Human. I believe she may share some characteristics in common with Humans but I see her as just a variety of ancient southern Ape. I do not accept the theory of one type of creature (say from one family) becoming another (as in a different family).

I use to believe this. In fact I was convinced of it. It is my belief now when I just look at what’s there, void of a pre-taught orientation, that fish do not become amphibians, which become reptiles, which become birds, and so on. I accept that as one way of interpreting the evidence but not as an established fact. Just because one thing precedes another in the geo-column does not necessitate one became the other. And that is NOT because I do not understand the theory of Evolution because I do (in fact I believe in evolution, just not the Darwinian variety).

How did you determine that these parts are not transitional?

Simple, that was never really the topic...when I look at Lucy and then the 1973 knee, I DO NOT automatically put them together...the Hadar knee could actually have been indicative of an early variety of Sapien...like the Olduvai footprints or the additional skulls and human femur found at the site of the Java skull cap....just because they are there did not mean they belonged to each other (I realize with Java man he hid the human skulls and only frankensteined the skull cap with the human femur)...

Therefore I did not determine they were not transitional in some sense (between Ape and Ape)....and I did not determine that some creatures do not share structural and topical features (homologically)...these things do not prove one came from the other in my opinion they just suggest workable successful designs.

Paul
 
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Loudmouth

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So Loudmouth, you asserted “Lucy” as transitional and asked if I thought she was. Well that depends on what you mean by that. I do not believe she is (or that it has been proven) transitional between Ape and Human. I believe she may share some characteristics in common with Humans but I see her as just a variety of ancient southern Ape. I do not accept the theory of one type of creature (say from one family) becoming another (as in a different family).

Would you reject any fossil as being transitional, no matter what it looked like?

If so, it would seem that your position is quite dogmatic and evidence free.

I use to believe this. In fact I was convinced of it. It is my belief now when I just look at what’s there, void of a pre-taught orientation, that fish do not become amphibians, which become reptiles, which become birds, and so on. I accept that as one way of interpreting the evidence but not as an established fact.

That isn't an interpretation. That is a pre-formed belief that evolution can't happen, and you could care less what the fossil evidence is. An interpretation actually deals with the fossil evidence. You don't. You just deny it without ever seeing it.

Just because one thing precedes another in the geo-column does not necessitate one became the other. And that is NOT because I do not understand the theory of Evolution because I do (in fact I believe in evolution, just not the Darwinian variety).

Paul

Why aren't fossils with a mixture of early ape and modern human features evidence that humans evolved from earlier apes? Why must you ignore all of the fossil evidence in order to hold on to your position?
 
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DaisyDay

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Dear Daisy....I guess it depends o which EB you are speaking to...
If EB means evolutionary biologist, then no, the terms are fairly standardized although classifications occasionally change upon new information.

same bacteria where one is subject to anti-biotics another resistant (called different species)....
Yes, there are many, many different species of bacteria. Of course, bacteria, unlike plants and animals, don't have sex so having fertile offspring is inapplicable to them, but their daughter cells are identical to themselves. They are capable of changing their DNA by other means than sex - when they do that enough, their DNA is no longer identical and they do become a new species with new properties and capabilities. It's pretty cool.

the definition of the word "species" has become so vague it can be conveniently twisted to fit the need of the EB...Yes these dogs are members of the same family but they are two different varieties (imagine if all we had were a scarce selection of 1,000,000 year old fossils of each?)
Even so, these dogs are the Canidae family (with wolves & foxes), the Canis genus, the lupus species and the familiaris sub-species. After that, they are divided into different breeds or varieties. Dogs and wolves are in the process of transitioning into separate species, but they are not quite there yet. I don't think you will find any biologist (or any dog breeder) who would consider St. Bernards and shih tzus to be different species.

...Africanus and Sediba and Afarensis may or may not be the same "species" but we are talking here about "LUCY" so as much as you would like to drag this into other issues, please stick with Afarensis....if you know of MANY or PLENTY of A.Afarensis pelvic fossil examples please show them...

If you want to discuss "Australopithicene" in general or Africanus or Sediba specifically then fine we can do that as soon as you start a new thread that addresses that. You would be surprized to find I probably agree more with you than with the Ken Ham-ites
Well, that's something, anyway.
 
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pshun2404

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That isn't an interpretation. That is a pre-formed belief that evolution can't happen, and you could care less what the fossil evidence is. An interpretation actually deals with the fossil evidence. You don't. You just deny it without ever seeing it.

a) I have seen it and do not deny it (just the stock interpretation of it)
b) I do not believe that evolution cannot happen I believe it does (just not as we were convinced of)
c) I do care what the fossil evidence is (I just do not agree with interpretations resting on homological assessment)

If insects have wings, reptiles have wings, birds have wings, mammals have wings, etc., this does not necessitate that one became the other. Now back to Lucy, okay? Pick a section....
 
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loveofourlord

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In this very thread we have creationists trying to toss out Lucy because it does not fit their paradigm of thinking. They will even go as far as using made up stories about scientists altering the fossils.


Scientific papers, please.

To be fair they arn't making them up, these are PRATT"s I heard about back when I first started to learn about Evolution 8 or so years ago. There are really no new arguments on old finds, just rehashing of the same ones refuted decades ago.
 
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Loudmouth

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a) I have seen it and do not deny it (just the stock interpretation of it)

What parts of the interpretation do you deny, and why?

1. Do you deny that Lucy has features in common with both less derived apes and with modern humans?

2. Do you deny that the theory of evolution predicts a nested hierarchy which includes species with a mixture of features with human and ancestral apes?

What criteria are you using for your interpretation? What features would a fossil need to have in order to be transitional as part of your interpretation?

b) I do not believe that evolution cannot happen I believe it does (just not as we were convinced of)

Do you believe that humans could have evolved from a common ancestor shared with other apes? Or is that a conclusion that you refuse to consider?

c) I do care what the fossil evidence is (I just do not agree with interpretations resting on homological assessment)

Then tell us what features a fossil would need in order to evidence humans evolving from a common ancestor shared with other apes.

If insects have wings, reptiles have wings, birds have wings, mammals have wings, etc., this does not necessitate that one became the other.

Those are not homologous structures. The features shared by humans and Lucy are homologous. Your examples do not work.
 
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pshun2404

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a) I have seen it and do not deny it (just the stock interpretation of it)

What parts of the interpretation do you deny, and why? (following are your questions and my response)

1. Do you deny that Lucy has features in common with both less derived apes and with modern humans?

Yes it can be explained that way but I do not believe homology (similarity in characteristics) necessitates relationship in a transitional sense (only in a design sense). In Ape kind many of those similarities proved unsuccessful over time.

2. Do you deny that the theory of evolution predicts a nested hierarchy which includes species with a mixture of features with human and ancestral apes?

First off, a nested hierarchy is one way that one categorizes groups of things (or organisms) placing one above another (which may or may not have attached “values” of things, like superiority/inferiority, more evolved/less evolved) and CAN BE seen as an indicator (though not necessarily true) that one thing bred or became another.

So Lucy can be seen this way if one assumes that natural selection via speciation eventually moves one type of creature with a particular genomic regularity to eventually become another different creature with a different genomic regularity (such as reptiles becoming birds)…which though accepted by many is an assumption based conclusion.

What criteria are you using for your interpretation? What features would a fossil need to have in order to be transitional as part of your interpretation?

Two questions here that are not necessarily related…

What criteria are you using for your interpretation?

I am not speaking of an interpretation, I am showing that matters of interpretation contain a subjective and sometimes “taught” aspect that is hard for most people to escape and therefore look at or assess data objectively.

My “criteria” is let the data alone speak and shape the theory (causing one to make continuous adjustments to hypotheses) rather than allowing (and I understand this is difficult for many) the hypothesis to interpret the data. Because early apes have a similar arm structure does NOT automatically mean our arms (only slightly different) CAME FROM this earlier form….just that the DNA governing structure in all primates contains the blueprint for this form.

Could one have developed from the other? Could be, might be….but could be/might be does not equal IS…thinking in alternatives is not only much healthier and supportive of more intellectual integrity, but is the source of all real progress and ingenuity even in science…one should always think outside the box rather than be robotically tied only to the box.

What features would a fossil need to have in order to be transitional as part of your interpretation?

Since I do not believe the evidence necessitates fish becoming amphibian, amphibian reptile, reptile bird, etc., the concept does not apply the same as YOU would define it. I do see basic bears becoming a variety of bears, grey wolf and maybe a few more eventually becoming (via their genetic potentials) many varieties (yes also aided by cross breeding and concentration of reinforced alleles) just as I see the original humans having the genetic propensities to become (again by interbreeding and reinforced alleles) all the varieties if human we now have (pigmies, watusi, caucasoids, asians, etc.)

b) I do not believe that evolution cannot happen, I believe it does (just not as we were convinced of)

Do you believe that humans could have evolved from a common ancestor shared with other apes? Or is that a conclusion that you refuse to consider?

I do not refuse to consider common ancestry, there just is no evidence it is a fact. I also DO NOT believe we are Apes. It is a theory, a way of interpreting the data that has led to many fine and valuable discoveries that may or may not have been made and seen in different ways. For example many modern neo-Darwinians see man as having evolved FROM ape kind, other as being two divergent lines from a common ancestor, I see each as unique to their own genomic regularity, and each uniquely appearing in the geo-column, and possibly two variations (physically speaking) within the same phylum (one kind of coded product versus another) but not the same genus.

We differ here because I see variation within a given species (ape versus human versus dog versus fish) and you see human and ape as the same species/genus having transitioned (from one to the other over time or sharing a common source)

c) I do care what the fossil evidence is (I just do not agree with interpretations resting on homological assessment)

Then tell us what features a fossil would need in order to evidence humans evolving from a common ancestor shared with other apes.

There are none. Each appears in the geo-column separately, suddenly, and fully formed with all ectant and inter-dependent sub-systems functional and in place. And again humans are not apes no matter how many say so because of their predetermined beliefs. Humans and apes are both primates possessing the DNA for structural similarities but they are as different as addition/subtraction is to calculus (Neanderthals, Denisovans, etc., are unsuccessful varieties of Sapien in their history, not quasi slightly more human trogladytes)

If insects have wings, reptiles have wings, birds have wings, mammals have wings, etc., this does not necessitate that one became the other.

Those are not homologous structures. The features shared by humans and Lucy are homologous. Your examples do not work.

You know the point I was trying to make (which I expect you would disagree). For a different example, first look at this photo

upload_2015-9-10_13-8-52.png



Now let me give you an example from http://evolution.about.com/od/evidence/a/Homologous-Structures.htm where they write

Many mammals have similar limb structures. The flipper of a whale, the wing of a bat, and the leg of a cat are all very similar to the human arm. All of the mentioned species have a large upper arm bone (the humerus on the human) and the lower part of the limb is made up of two bones, a larger bone on one side (the radius in humans) and a smaller bone on the other side (the ulna in humans). All of the species also have a collection of smaller bones in the "wrist" area (these are called carpal bones in humans) that lead into the long "fingers" or phalanges. Even though the bone structure in these limbs of the mammals are very similar, the function of the limb itself is very different. The homologous limbs can be used for flying, swimming, walking, or everything humans do with their arms.

Now comes the imposed hypothesis that is merely one way of looking at or interpreting the evidence, based on the pre-supposed theory! They go on to conclude….

These functions evolved through natural selection as the common ancient ancestor underwent speciation to make all of the diversity we have on Earth today.”

Not only do they imply cross familial morphism as a definite truth (though never demonstrates or observed and tests cannot nor have ever proven) but that they claim it to be the result of natural selection via “speciation” while in reality “speciation” has always and consistently ONLY demonstrated and been observed to provide variation (nothing new such as a new organ or a cross over into another family or phyla). Can’t you see (even IF you agree with the assessment) that the presupposition in being used to explain the data (questionable science) instead of the other way around (real science)?

Now I am not saying they do this conspiratorially (as often falsely accused). No! They really believe this conclusion IS the truth, they are just only able to see through the only box that the pedagoguery will accept.

My point is, that the data alone must always determine the conclusion one should reach (not limited to the accepted view) if one is being objective…all else is commentary, conjecture, and opinion, nothing else, and certainly NOT “the” established fact (and do not fall for the “appeal to authority” error).

Paul
 
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Loudmouth

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Yes it can be explained that way but I do not believe homology (similarity in characteristics) necessitates relationship in a transitional sense (only in a design sense).

Do you believe that if evolution did occur that there should have been species with a mixture of human and ape features?

In Ape kind many of those similarities proved unsuccessful over time.

They worked out pretty well in one lineage of primate.

2. Do you deny that the theory of evolution predicts a nested hierarchy which includes species with a mixture of features with human and ancestral apes?
First off, a nested hierarchy is one way that one categorizes groups of things (or organisms) placing one above another (which may or may not have attached “values” of things, like superiority/inferiority, more evolved/less evolved) and CAN BE seen as an indicator (though not necessarily true) that one thing bred or became another.

So Lucy can be seen this way if one assumes that natural selection via speciation eventually moves one type of creature with a particular genomic regularity to eventually become another different creature with a different genomic regularity (such as reptiles becoming birds)…which though accepted by many is an assumption based conclusion.

Linnaeus was able to organize life into a nested hierarchy without assuming common ancestry or evolution. Also, phylogenies are objectively supported.

"The degree to which a given phylogeny displays a unique, well-supported, objective nested hierarchy can be rigorously quantified. Several different statistical tests have been developed for determining whether a phylogeny has a subjective or objective nested hierarchy, or whether a given nested hierarchy could have been generated by a chance process instead of a genealogical process (Swofford 1996, p. 504). These tests measure the degree of "cladistic hierarchical structure" (also known as the "phylogenetic signal") in a phylogeny, and phylogenies based upon true genealogical processes give high values of hierarchical structure, whereas subjective phylogenies that have only apparent hierarchical structure (like a phylogeny of cars, for example) give low values (Archie 1989; Faith and Cranston 1991; Farris 1989; Felsenstein 1985; Hillis 1991; Hillis and Huelsenbeck 1992; Huelsenbeck et al. 2001; Klassen et al. 1991)."
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/section1.html#nested_hierarchy

Nested hierarchies aren't just flukes or assumptions. They are real observations that are objective and falsifiable.

This is the problem. You ignore the data.

I am not speaking of an interpretation, I am showing that matters of interpretation contain a subjective and sometimes “taught” aspect that is hard for most people to escape and therefore look at or assess data objectively.

You have shown no such thing. You have simply asserted it.

My “criteria” is let the data alone speak and shape the theory (causing one to make continuous adjustments to hypotheses) rather than allowing (and I understand this is difficult for many) the hypothesis to interpret the data.

No, it isn't. We have already seen that you start with the conclusion that humans could not have evolved from earlier apes, and you refuse to accept any fossils as evidence for that conclusion.

Because early apes have a similar arm structure does NOT automatically mean our arms (only slightly different) CAME FROM this earlier form….just that the DNA governing structure in all primates contains the blueprint for this form.

Exactly what you would expect from evolution.

If apes and humans were separately created there is no reason that humans would fall into a nested hierarchy with other apes. There is no reason that DNA would produce the same phylogeny as physical characteristics. An omnipotent creator could have made almost two identical looking species that only share maybe 35% of their DNA.

Could one have developed from the other? Could be, might be….but could be/might be does not equal IS…thinking in alternatives is not only much healthier and supportive of more intellectual integrity, but is the source of all real progress and ingenuity even in science…one should always think outside the box rather than be robotically tied only to the box.

Ignoring data is not "thinking outside the box".

Since I do not believe the evidence necessitates fish becoming amphibian, amphibian reptile, reptile bird, etc., the concept does not apply the same as YOU would define it.

In other words, you ignore the fossil data.


I do not refuse to consider common ancestry, there just is no evidence it is a fact.

Why aren't transitional fossils evidence?

I also DO NOT believe we are Apes. It is a theory, a way of interpreting the data that has led to many fine and valuable discoveries that may or may not have been made and seen in different ways.

How is that interpretation wrong? It isn't enough to call something an interpretation. You also need to show that the interpretation is wrong.

For example many modern neo-Darwinians see man as having evolved FROM ape kind, other as being two divergent lines from a common ancestor, I see each as unique to their own genomic regularity, and each uniquely appearing in the geo-column, and possibly two variations (physically speaking) within the same phylum (one kind of coded product versus another) but not the same genus.

You could see the moon as a big chunk of green cheese. Reality could care less. What matters is what you can evidence. Have any evidence?

c) I do care what the fossil evidence is (I just do not agree with interpretations resting on homological assessment)
Then tell us what features a fossil would need in order to evidence humans evolving from a common ancestor shared with other apes.

There are none.

Thanks for confirming your total denial of the fossil evidence.

Now comes the imposed hypothesis that is merely one way of looking at or interpreting the evidence, based on the pre-supposed theory! They go on to conclude….

These functions evolved through natural selection as the common ancient ancestor underwent speciation to make all of the diversity we have on Earth today.”

How is that an "imposed" hypothesis? What does that even mean?

Not only do they imply cross familial morphism as a definite truth (though never demonstrates or observed and tests cannot nor have ever proven)

We are showing you that evidence, and you refuse to accept it.
 
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