ape wrote:So where are the living intermediates of which there shd also be endless?In biology, we usually talk about different species inhabiting different ecological niches. That is, the rabbit eats grass, the coyote eats the rabbit; competitors for the same niche don't last long in a limited system. So if bobcats are introduced, and they're better at hunting than the coyotes, there will be less food for the coyotes; if the coyotes are weak enough, they will either go extinct or have to move out of the system.
Similarly, intelligent, two-legged primates inhabit a niche; there is only so much food and shelter for us. So, when we started to grow bigger brains than our relatives, we were much more successful, and pushed them to extinction or mated with them until there was nothing left. Conversely, we are far enough from our closest living relatives--I think chimpanzees--that we don't compete for a niche.
We know this happened specifically with Neanderthals, who lived at the same time as modern man; they are now extinct.
Juice wrote:Alun-I distinctly said that there is no "empirical" evidence that "modern" man evolved. Commonality of genes is not empirical evidence.I didn't even cite genetic commonality. I cited the fossil record. Do you think that doesn't count either?
Juice wrote:Man is so much more than the sum of his parts which currently cannot be explained by evolution alone given the fact that man is exponentially superior to his nearest genetic equivalent.Living genetic equivalent? You mean chimpanzees? Again, we know a ton of hominids existed in between our first appearance and the time of our common ancestor with chimpanzees. I have enough posts to link now so look:
All of those are human relatives with fossil evidence from archaeologyinfo.com. Relative to earlier hominids, Homo erectus had "An increase in brain size (erectus approximately 900 cc., sapiens approximately 1350 cc.)." Neanderthals had an even larger brain size. However, we know that Neanderthals were developed in different regions than us; they had pretty good tools, but no art, for example.