Human Origins Theory Tested By Recent Findings 272
annamadrigal writes "The BBC news is reporting on findings presented in Nature which suggest that Homo Erectus and H. Habilis were in fact sister species which co-existed. This challenges the view that the upright humans evolved from the tool users."
Been there, done that. (Score:3)
Re:Been there, done that. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Been there, done that. (Score:4, Insightful)
The article is really written in a very unscientific way, for example this statement:
What the scientific society thinks doesn't usually change all that fast, the hypothesis first has to be verified and tested etc.
But then again in this kind of archeology this thing with verifying and testing hypothesis can be a bit difficult even though they try as they best can, but trying to figure out how humans evolved through evolution is imho as much guesswork as it is science with what we have of evidence so far.
Re:Been there, done that. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Been there, done that. (Score:5, Insightful)
No. Just... no. No, no, no, no, NO!
Honestly, I'd LOVE to see a T-rex or an Allasaurus or another obvious carnivore TRY to eat leaves with a mouth like that. We KNOW today that flat teeth are used for grinding plants. I mean, it's basic instinct. When you eat meat, you use your slimmer and pointer front teeth to tear it into slimmer pieces. When you eat a salad, you don't use your front teeth at all, and simply let the back teeth grind the leaves.
It's pure bullshit, and it's easily debunked by anyone with two brain cells to rub together. Same for sharks. They have rows upon rows of sharp, serrated teeth. Are you going to tell me they ate kelp?
Not to mention that we see hundreds of cave drawings of bison and deer and other roaming mammals... yet does anyone find it strange that no caveman decided to draw a HUGE monstrous death machine roaming the lands? I mean, not ONE SINGLE MENTION anywhere in all of human culture until we discovered their bones?
No, I am no a biologist, archaeologist, or any other professional, but I think my evidence stands as is. I'm sure a real scientist could provide FAR more examples.
Creationism science is an oxymoron, because Creationism is the polar opposite of science. You start with a conclusion (God made the Earth and the Bible shows how he did it) and then proceed to find evidence that supports that, as opposed to finding evidence and then making a conclusion based on the evidence.
The Bible is not literal. Period. It is a series of stories and ideas put into writing in ancient times to explain, back then, how they thought things came to be.
To me, believing in Creationism is like saying "I believe the sky is green." It's just wrong. Yes, there is a degree of uncertainty in it, such as how "green" something is before it's green, but with science, we can break down light and find its wavelength and say "This light is blue." You can still believe that it is green, just as you can believe men walked the earth alongside dinosaurs, that a man with a boat carried two of EVERY species of animal on Earth for over a month after a God gave him the designs for it, and the first woman came from the ribs of the first man.
But you'd be wrong. "Believing" that 2+2=5 doesn't change the fact that it's 4, even if you call it an "opinion." Facts do not care what you think.
(Note: Yes, I know the Parent was joking. But this stuff SERIOUSLY pisses me off)
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I agree with your premise but your explanation is wrong. Both types will go look for facts to support their ideas. The basic difference is that the scientist makes a statement crafted in such a way that it COULD be dis-proved and accepts the f
Proof (Score:2)
Now where is my beer?
TO get back to the article (Score:2)
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I don't argue against Creationism. I argue against those who do not differentiate between faith and science. The big difference of course is that science makes FALSIFIABLE claims while faith is a believe in some claim even in the face of good reasons not to. The mainstrea
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So, what does Creation Science or Intelligent Design teach? What does it predict? How can you form an experiment? Can the result from an experiment change the premise? If not then it's not science.
As the Dover trial [millerandlevine.com] pointed out, all of the "evidence" for
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Einstein predicted a certain bending of light in terms of the general "predicted theory of relativity and it was not proven to be absolutely spot on until the 1960's, I believe. So the science "predicted fact" is recognized as valid ("true") after the prediction is fulfilled.
But there are extant copies of things like Isaiah (from the Dead Sea Scrolls) that include nearly word for word what the Masoretic text used in the KJV holds, and some of the prophecies in Isaiah are fulfilled long
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The latest accepted date for the book of Daniel is still pre-Christian era, and still pre-date Julius Caesar's dictatorship/declaration of "emporer" etc around 44 BC) to around 106 AD, and the break of of big empires into little kingdoms could not have been predicted, as the history of the region from around the time of Nebuchadnezzar (sp?) through the Roman Empire was a history of empire following empire following empire. There would have been no reason for anyone to assume t
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Is the difference between a history book, which tries to represent historical events and a bible, which tries to represent spiritual philosophy, really that hard to comprehend?
You haven't really read the Old Testament, have you? Yes, there is a fair amount of spiritual philosophy in it. There are also vast amounts of rather boring historical and genealogical information. I would say that the only stupid people are the ones that aren't capable of reading the Bible and separating the plausible and implausible.
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All lies (Score:3, Funny)
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This is the truth [youtube.com].
BS (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:BS (Score:4, Insightful)
That's what I don't understand in TFA. (Score:4, Interesting)
Humans and other primates have shared the same areas ever since there were humans. Yet we have only recently started wiping out other primates. And it isn't because we are competing with them for the food sources. We wipe out their environment, food sources and all.
So there thing about "Eventually, one would have out-competed the other." doesn't sound right. "Eventually", maybe. But to say that any conclusions can be derived simply because it had not happened in X years
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P) Vengeance although a somewhat undesirable human characteristic was still very likely influential in the evolution of humans and their societies and in the extinction of competing species.
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I do. As I understand it, it's extremely unlikely that homo sapiens and Neanderthals interbred successfully.
Even even if they did integrate in, and interbred with, homo sapiens, then their genes would still have gone extinct if their descendents weren't as fit for their environment as pure hom
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So yea, their genes that made them different vanished but the ones that were the same stayed around. Newer advances in science shows they had a higher degree of inteligence then once though, had a system
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Are we still talking about Neanderthal versus Homo sapiens? Because that difference is quite a lot bigger than that between a Chinese and a European, in many different ways. Europeans and Chinese are more similar genetically than two random Africans, whereas Neanderthals had a different skull, different skeletal and muscle structure, etc. I'm not an expert on thi
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I used to have a link to the show but it is broken now and was probable a year or so old. It even claimed that some people have Neanderthal genes in them still today. Of course searching google seems to be worthless unless y
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Re:BS (Score:5, Insightful)
I know this wasn't the point of your post, but this is a pet peeve of mine. There's mutation, competition, and cooperation, both inter and intra species. We'd be screwed without mitochondria. We'd be screwed without each other. Nonzero sum, mutually beneficial relationships (cooperation) affect evolution, just like the zero sum (competition) ones.
Carry on.
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My guess is that there was a third species, Homo Stupidus that evolved into journalists.
Modern time example. (Score:4, Insightful)
It doesn't "challenge" that view at all. Evolution is mutation plus competition, you need the competition part. Of course they co-existed, as must have all consecutive evolution stages in every being's evolution.
Exactly my thoughts.
Think about this, archaeological and genetic evidence points to modern humans having left Africa 50000-100000 years ago. Modern humans are only about 200.000 years old as a species and yet, the Scanvinavians already have lighter skin full facial beards and some other biological features which make them distinct from those who didn't leave Africa.
We could say that the scandivavians "evolved" from the Africans to suit the cold climate, nonetheless the two are still co-habiting almost everywhere in the world.
The time period which the article states as a "proof" is 500.000 years long. Just imagine how the scandinavians, ot the inuits might look after 450.000 years if there was no communication between the two groups.
Cain and Abel (Score:4, Interesting)
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Adam & Eve = hunter/gatherers.
A few years later (after the dome
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Oh c'mon take the tongue-in-cheek criticism, don't be so defensive....no?...okay Troll me......or Flamebait me....I know I know.
Exactly. (Score:2)
If there was no shortage of food and resources then there's no reason that the pre-humans that didn't walk on two feet would have died out at all so the two species could have quite happley lived together.
(Sory, the spell checker in firefox has stop
Well... (Score:3, Insightful)
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</sarcasm>
Homo Mormonus (Score:5, Insightful)
Polygomy is and was fairly common in humans.
Re:Homo Mormonus (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Homo Mormonus (Score:5, Funny)
Can you get that in writing? Like, from a real anthropologist?
And then send it to my wife?
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Re:Homo Mormonus (Score:5, Informative)
This suggests that throughout humans and their ancestors have been moderately polygynous.
My source being The Mating Mind by Geoffrey Miller
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mating_Mind [wikipedia.org]
Equivalent Sun frontpage headline (Score:3, Funny)
I'm not sure I see the problem (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I'm not sure I see the problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Now if only an actual anthropologist would pick up on that idea...
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I wish I could remember the girls name. She had some interesting poi
Re:I'm not sure I see the problem (Score:5, Informative)
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- The Naked Ape
, but there's been other work in the same vein. At the end of the day, it's not entertained seriously because it's simply not credible--it doesn't hold up to serious criticism. You might start with http://www.aquaticape.org/ [aquaticape.org]Re: (Score:2)
Actually, humans are (one of?) the best long distance runners in the animal kingdom. Why would fishers need to be able to run for days on the plains? Maybe somewhere so
continuing evolution (Score:3, Funny)
tool users? (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a saying amongst psychologists that at some point, each must come up with a reason why humans are fundamentally different from the other animals, only for someone to eventually prove them wrong.
Re:tool users? (Score:4, Informative)
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Tool construction and use is not a uniquely human trait, it's not even unique to primates.
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Re:tool users? (Score:5, Insightful)
>There is a saying amongst psychologists that at some point, each must come up with a reason why humans are fundamentally different from the other animals, only for someone to eventually prove them wrong.
I accept your challenge!
"Humans are fundamentally different from other animals, because we can travel into space using only tools we built."
Re:tool users? (Score:5, Insightful)
H2G2 -- Douglas Adams
Re: tool users? (Score:2)
"Humans are fundamentally different from other animals, because we can travel into space using only tools we built."
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"Humans are fundamentally different from other animals, because we can travel into space using only tools we built."
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Lots of animals have abstraction. Bees can communicate complex navigational routes using sign language inside their hives. That's pretty clear abstraction.
We do science right! (Score:5, Informative)
Next, both species walked very much erect. The primary difference between them is the skull and brain.
The BBC got it right. there's no reason the submitter, or Slashdot, should not have gotten it right, too.
As to the science, the wisest words in TFA come from Professor Spoor (snicker):
Of course, that assumes the new skull really is H. erectus, which is dubious. Maybe it was an H. erectus ancestor, small like H. habilis but with an H. erectus-like brain.
Why yes, I do have a degree in physical anthropology. Thank you for asking.
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You're write, sir!
I wonder... (Score:5, Funny)
Cohabitation, not just for monkeys (Score:3, Interesting)
In my theory of evolution, it's not so much that "the fittest survive," but that "those that fit survive." There's a feedback loop that occurs in the environment. Those that benefit themselves, others, and the environment as a whole tend to survive and evolve more readily than those that form an adversarial relationship to others and the environment.
Monkeys still exist because there have been - and remain - plenty of habitats that are beneficial to the
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No not really. phenotype
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That's a coincidence! It's the same in Darwin's theory of evolution! (Ofcourse you have to realise that you don't fit anymore once someone else eats your food before you get the chance to.)
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Man (Homo sapiens) did not evolve from a "monkey." Modern humans and apes share a common ancestor (NOT a monkey) and apes are the closest genetic relatives humans have in the nature.
It's also wrong to say that humans are "clearly superior" to monkeys. The superiority is only measured by your reproductive success. By this measure, insects
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It also says something about the OP that reproductive prowess is the first measuring stick pulled out. How about using mobility, communications or creativity as a yard stick? How about we pull out wallets and compare those? Well, monkeys don't have wallets, do they.
I'm sure there's some really deep academic argument for this. It probably has been peer reviewed, the mark of good science is consensus.
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You obviously have not been keeping up on world events....
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News report: H. erectus and habilis couldn'tve lived side-by-side because one would outcompete the other.
Submitter: Monkeys live alongside species with superior intelligence, but they haven't been 'outcompeted'.
So I'd give subby +1, insightful.
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About monkeys themselves - humans are not considered to have evolved from monkeys but the great apes. Specifically, chimpanzees are supposed to be our close ancestors.
http://www.unisci.com/stories/20013/0712011.htm [unisci.com]
The earliest chimpanzee fossils date from 500000 years ago near fossils of Homo erectus or Homo rhodensiensis. So it is considered that chimpanzees and Homo erectus were contemporaries.
http://www.newscientist.com/artic [newscientist.com]
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Chimps see
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At least we know (Score:5, Funny)
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Do they explain how you get from wolf to chihuahua without some sort of evolution, either directed (as in selective breeding) or natural?
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I've heard that some zoologists consider that speciation between wolves & dogs isn't quite complete yet.
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It's not. Speciation is, generally speaking, marked by the inability to produce viable offspring (where viable == can reproduce successfully). This isn't true for dogs and wolves.
Re:At least we know (Score:5, Insightful)
Still could have evolved (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see why co-existence would discount evolving from Homo Habilis. Since after all if we really did evolve from primates, there would be no primates today under this logic.
It' still possible that some Homo Habilis evolved into Homo erectus while others remained homo habilis. Just as monkeys evolved into whatever became the H. Habilis, yet monkeys still exist.
Common Ancestors Diverged Due to Different Habitat (Score:2)
As far as I understand it, in order for one species to split into two distinct species the original group has to be split up into two distin
Nah... evidence of early archaeology! (Score:2)
The real story here... (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyways, the real story here is the incredibly poor coverage of this finding by the mainstream press. The BBC article linked to here isn't so bad, but just go to Google News and look at some of the headlines, in what I would consider increasing order of ridiculousness:
"Fossil find casts doubt on origins of man"
"new theory on the dawn of humanity"
"Fossils Paint Messy Picture of Evolution"
"Fossil Discoveries Challenge Theory of Human Evolution"
"Darwin's rolling over"
They make it look like this is somehow a CHALLENGE to THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION ITSELF. In other words, "let's take some story we don't really understand, but it hey it has the word 'evolution' in it, so we can manipulate this to stir up that ol' hornet's nest and sell papers!"
I think this is the most disappointing example in a while of the sorry state of science journalism.
not "not evolved", just not "anagenetic" (Score:2, Insightful)
Anagenetic means one type of an organism is a direct descendant of the other type without splitting. Co-existance by definition eliminates that, meaning the individuals that lived at the same time are not descendants of one another but descendants of earlier generations. If you and I are of the same age, I cannot be your father and vice versa, but we still can share the same father, grandfather, etc...
This is is because of the mess with nomenclature which essentially
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Root said let there be God, and there was God?
Re:My own $0.02 (Score:5, Informative)
Hydrogen is by far the most abundant chemical element in the Universe. Helium is second. Oxygen is third. Carbon is fourth. None of these are in any way scarce; I have no idea where you got the notion that there was a shortage of oxygen in the Universe. As for water, the solar system is full of the stuff; water vapour is present in the atmosphere of Venus, water ice is present at the Martian poles, and the outer solar system is practically made of ice. The only thing that's unusual about Earth is the presence of liquid water.
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Around other stars, it is quite likely that if there are planets at the correct distance from the sun, then they water on them.
I don't know where you got the idea that it's extremely rare. We really don't know, but current estimates are that there should be million
Re:My own $0.02 (Score:4, Insightful)
Hence, a chicken-and-egg problem. Once you've got the GA, the whole process can go along just fine, working according to the rules of the GA. However, the burning question is, how did the GA itself get there? I've never heard of any scenario where a GA itself can evolve via an atheistic process, but if anyone knows of one, please share.
In the context of natural evolution, the heuristic is physical survival. As opposed to a simulation, where the heuristic is whatever characteristic the programmer is trying to induce.
I'm not sure I entirely understand the point you are making but if you are saying how can a computer simulation evolve naturally, all I can say is GAs are designed by humans. Humans evolved naturally. So such simulations are ultimately the product of natural processes.
If on the other hand you are likening biological evolution to a GA, and then saying since GAs are designed, so must biological evolution be, then you are making a rather confused point. GAs were originally inspired by the natural process of biological evolution. We stole the idea from nature. Mutation with natural selection and heredity are self evidently intrinsic to the logic of our physical universe. Your question implies circularity but only by implying its own answer.
Thus, when I think about it at all, at least at the moment I'm inclined towards a hybrid theory of how we got here, which actually includes elements of both creationism and evolutionary thinking. My own perspective is that yes, evolution happens. We see the end products of it all the time, and yes, to a degree the process has been successfully simulated (with some interesting results) in the AI field.
However, where God steps into the picture for me in this context is as the provider of the initial GA, after which organisms can themselves take over the process from there. I'm not claiming (at least in this context) to have any definite idea of what God actually is or was, either...but I do think that there are at least a couple of areas, (such as the GA question) which atheistic evolutionary theory alone can't really account for.
You're talking about aspects of the universe outside of evolutionary theory. Evolutionary theory describes how biological organisms change over generations. The gap you are filling with god is the creation of the physical laws of the universe. This has nothing to do with evolutionary theory. It's an important distinction to make, as a lot of anti-evolution crackpots use the tactic of lumping the stupendously well established theory of evolution in with a bunch of questions that have yet to be satisfactorily answered, such as abiogenesis and the source of the universe, in an attempt to undermine the credibility of the theory of evolution in a kind of guilt-by-association. Your position regarding the creation of the universe is covered here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmological_argument [wikipedia.org]
The other thing I'd like to have an atheist tell me is how they believe water got here initially, and more specifically, why the water cycle starts on some planets and not on others. From what I was reading a while back, water actually initially gets produced in a closed-circuit chemical reaction, with the three elements, hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon. Once it gets started, the loop can keep going as long as those three elements are all present; my question is, how did those three elements become present here on Earth, especially when oxygen in particular seems to be rare almost to the point of being entirely unique in the universe, from what I've seen?
All I can say about that is that you really need to do some reading.
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100% conclusive proof is an impossible target for anything. There is simply a sliding scale of certitude that every scientific claims falls upon. You are using this technicality to give the impression that anything that is not 100% certain must be false.