SW VandeCarr said:
Are you going to deny the common perceptions? I never indicated I supported such perceptions. The common perception is that our species has a some privileged place on this planet. I wrote a book debunking that
I certainly deny those perceptions; I do not deny that they are commonly held. They also appear to be held by you. You state very clearly "We are the dominant species on the Earth today."
You state very clearly "It seems we are not descended from the most prestigious of lines."
I must accept that you do not actually hold those views, but I recommend you make your true views clearer so we can avoid pointless discussion in future.
By dominant species, I'm referring to top predators in a given environment, not necessarily a single species ranging over the entire world at a given point in time.
I'm sorry, but that simply makes no sense. You have said "We are the dominant species on the Earth today." That's one species ranging over the entire Earth. Now you are defining dominant species in a local environment. In the couple of acres around my house the dominant species is
felis catus. Your statements are contradictory and ambiguous.
Are there no species (or genus or order) that survive today from very early times? What about the horseshoe crab?
No. None. Nada.
There is perhaps a genus or two, and certainly some families, however, your posts refer exclusively, up until now, to species. If you meant something else, why did you not say so?
Where did I suggest that? I was referring to common perceptions. You're reading far more into my question than was ever intended or could be reasonably inferred.
Wrong. You specifically stated that
if we were descended from certain lines
then we should be respectful of them. In English grammar, as in programming languages, such an
if...then... construction very clearly implies
if not ...then don't .
Again, I must accept that you did not mean this, but you sure as hell said it.
Can anyone speak to my original question:
Buy the Ancestor's Tale. You have had it recommended quite independently by two of us. It exactly addresses the question you have asked.
Are there any such descriptions or better, drawings, in "The Ancestors Tale"?
It is full of descriptions and even better, many references to the research on which it is based.
to Jim mcnamara and mgbphys, re the beetles, bacteria and ants, they are not the
dominant species, since they contain very many species. I agree that one of these is in the running for dominant lifeform.
