On Wednesday, May 28, 2014 1:04:34 AM UTC+1, Liz R wrote:
>
> On 28 May 2014 11:55, <[email protected] <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>>
>> the sponge point seems fair, but hybridization is misconstrued in popular 
>> knowledge. In scientific terms the best theory of human origins by a mile, 
>> is a hyrbidization event involving apes and pigs. The only reason it's 
>> ignored is because a lot of people have spent a long time barking up 
>> another tree that has never even explained how humans stood by gradual 
>> evoluation. We still looking at the same daft illustration of a sequence, 
>> where the intermediate stage has the fella sort of hunched over with 
>> knuckles not touching the ground any more. That's not a viable posture...it 
>> wouldn't happen 
>>
>
> Yes I've heard the pig idea. It's supported by the fact that our immune 
> systems are apparently very similar to pigs', which I assume is why we use 
> bits of pig to repair our faulty heart valves, and quite a few religions 
> have taboos against eating pigs, presumably because we're similar enough to 
> catch their parasites...
>

there's an awful lot more evidence...most of it a lot harder than this. 
It's effectively a knock down case, certainly in comparison with what is 
treated as the leading theory. I strongly suggest you have a read of his 
short few pages long overview. for example, every the isn't ape, whther 
bones or noses or lips or feet or skin and multicomplex subcutes veins and 
underflesh. It's a straight explanation of standing up...half way between 
ape and pig can't go on all fours. 

this isn't a the quality of similarities, he's put the bones under a 
microscope. People argue against it that all those half way to pig traits 
is convergent evolution. But humans and pigs don't just share high level 
featues in bones. they share t cosmall scale bumps and crevices, that are 
impossible to acquire by convergent evolution, because all they are, are 
acquired little random changes ater evolutionary time. You have to share 
parentage for that. 

It's worth the read just to see the difference a true scientist brings to 
evolutionary theory, where what is currently there, says nothing of 
distinctive value that I can recall. Not compared to what that guy puts 
over. He did his legwork

does go back to francis bacon actually...that gets reviewed same site 
macroevolution.net

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