heyhey let's talk hominid fossils
This is the link you sent, right?
there are now thousands of hominid fossils. They are however mostly fragmentary, often consisting of single bones or isolated teeth. Complete skulls and skeletons are rare.
Ok, so we're talking about singular bones/teeth and citing them as the "missing link." I see the pictures. Let's see how they interpret them:
There are a number of clear trends (which were neither continuous nor uniform) from early australopithecines to recent humans: increasing brain size, increasing body size, increasing use of and sophistication in tools, decreasing tooth size, decreasing skeletal robustness. There are no clear dividing lines between some of the later gracile australopithecines and some of the early Homo, between erectus and archaic sapiens, or archaic sapiens and modern sapiens.
Despite this, there is little consensus on what our family tree is. Everyone accepts that the robust australopithecines (aethiopicus, robustus and boisei) are not ancestral to us, being a side branch that left no descendants. Whether H. habilis is descended from A. afarensis, africanus, both of them, or neither of them, is still a matter of debate. It is possible that none of the known australopithecines is our ancestor.
A number of new genera and species have been discovered within the last decade (Ar. ramidus, Au. amanensis, Au. bahrelghazali, Au. garhi, Orrorin, Kenyanthropus, Sahelanthropus) and no consensus has yet formed on how they are related to each other or to humans. It is generally accepted that Homo erectus is descended from Homo habilis (or, at least, some of the fossils often assigned to habilis), but the relationship between erectus, sapiens and the Neandertals is still unclear. Neandertal affinities can be detected in some specimens of both archaic and modern sapiens.
I'm shaking my head. Did you read that? This evolutionist admits the lack of consensus but you're claiming it's case closed evidence - the "missing link." This evolutionist gives no answers - just a lot of we're-not-sures.
This is not case closed evidence, dude. It's not. I'm not gonna accept evidence that even among evolutionists there's no clear consensus, and I'm sorry that you have.
Now is when some make assumptions about me - that I just can't accept that I might have descended from an ape.
THAT'S why he won't join the rational side - thus making the assumption that I'm not rational about this. It's the same as the assumptions mormons make about why so-and-so stopped going to church.
Because he wants to sin or he was offended by some member. Not that he did a little research into church history. I hate that people do this. But I probably do it too. Whatevs. I was an evolutionist, so I had no problem with the idea that we descended from apes. But the evidence for it is lacking. It was really eye opening to look at what was claimed as evidence. We got a buncha bones and somebody says
hey this looks kinda human but also kinda like an ape - could it be? And then the imagination fills in the gaps. I'm oversimplifying, yes, but not much. People hear some scientist rattle off all this jargon and assume they know what they're talking about. Read this story:
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2013/oct/17/skull-homo-erectus-human-evolution They found some skulls and now the scientific community is all "what?"
Analysis of the skull and other remains at Dmanisi suggests that scientists have been too ready to name separate species of human ancestors in Africa. Many of those species may now have to be wiped from the textbooks.
"What all this screams out for is more and better specimens. We need skeletons, more complete material, so we can look at them from head to toe," he added. "Any time a scientist says 'we've got this figured out' they are probably wrong. It's not the end of the story."
why do we need better specimens if the case for evolution has been closed?
I'm not going to convince you guys to be less certain of something so uncertain. Debates on internet forums are kind of a joke in themselves. My day-to-day existence doesn't really require me to know where I originated from. But the guys vehemently claiming that they know where man came from only provide evidence that requires a lot of conjecture. I won't sacrifice my reason to be part of the majority. Keep huffing and puffing, evolutionists. But rather than getting your panties in a bunch because some people still won't succumb to your gap-filled evidence, why don't you go out and find the evidence. Or maybe the lack of evidence is why you're huffing and puffing.
It's a theory. It ain't my theory, so burden of proof isn't mine.
Did you guys hear about Francis Crick and his panspermia theory? It's pretty hilarious. But we're veering out of evolution and into intelligent design territory.
Here's Crick's theory of where the DNA molecule he discovered actually came from (if you want a laugh):
https://www.cracked.com/article_19777_5-great-scientists-who-believed-wildly-unscientific-things_p2.html