To me, you're missing a crucial term here: some. To lump all scientist together like this is might be a disservice to scientists as a whole. Akin to: humans have historically .... you know what, I won't even mention examples. Linguistic gripe, that's all. — javra
Foxes become tame, with more barking in adults and more upright tail waving, simply because a stress hormone gene is suppressed in the taming. (Tails go up, ears come down. The tame foxes aren't a different species either -- their just tame foxes. — Bitter Crank
"Yes, Virginia, you actually are a bit of a neanderthal." — Bitter Crank
Some humans have historically done this … and the fatalism to “always will because it is in our genetic/God-given nature to” doesn’t sit well with me. — javra
those who throw flowers into the graves of their deceased" — javra
Galapagos finches and new world finches...chimps and bonobos.. — javra
Some goodness is genetic, some badness is genetic, and a lot of it is mediated by culture. — Bitter Crank
There is a skeleton of either a very early homo sapiens or neanderthal who was quite deformed, but who reached adulthood. — Bitter Crank
Not so clear cut: — Janus
True enough, and if the very notion of species is not clear cut then the notion of speciation would be all the less so. — Janus
Religionists of that level don't have anything useful to say about science nor are they worth trying to convince because their group identity is more important to them than being right. This has been studied extensively (see some of the podcasts I've linked to recently which give a good overview of the research ) and the results are as bleak as that. The best thing to do is to just leave them to their ignorance. Yes, speciation obviously happens otherwise there wouldn't be any different... species. And how it happens has been studied and described by scientists. It's not a mystery. — Baden
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you have such disdain for. — T Clark
I'm not talking about religious people in general, I'm talking about religious people who maintain that their religious beliefs have a scientific grounding or who try to enforce their religious views re science in the education system, which can only result in mass levels of ignorance, and is a form of abuse as far as I'm concerned. — Baden
So, what is the evidence for speciation? Not viruses, not unusual plant behavior, just regular organisms evolving from one species to another. 1) fossil record. 2) comparative genetic studies between organisms 3) experience with breeding 4) observations in nature 5) What else? — T Clark
Fair points. I've had some exhausting experiences debating creationists and the like and seen many others suffer the same fate, so my attitude is somewhat jaded. — Baden
I think 1-4 make a compelling case on their own, and when you add viruses and plants to the equation it bolsters that case. When one steps back and takes into account cosmological timelines, geological timelines, and all of the above, it paints a fairly holistic picture that is hard to make sense of with any other description. — ProbablyTrue
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Here's an article about neanderthals from Science News from 1975: — Bitter Crank
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