One Eyed Jack
New member
Well, here's what he actually says about Archaeopteryx:
Alate_One says his views are untestable and therefore not science. Who am I to believe?
Well, here's what he actually says about Archaeopteryx:
But both you and Bob are pretending that Archeopteryx being a bird somehow causes a problem for evolution. It doesn't.Who cares? I'm not an evolutionist.
See what Flipper just said. A transitional organism isn't something that defies classification it is simply something that has ancestral as well as derived (more evolved) traits. Archeopteryx retains a lot of ancestral characters and has a number of derived ones.Feduccia says it's a full-fledged bird.
Alate_One says his views are untestable and therefore not science. Who am I to believe?
But both you and Bob are pretending that Archeopteryx being a bird somehow causes a problem for evolution. It doesn't.
Learn to read what I'm actually saying please.
Bird or dinosaur is simply classification. What is untestable about Alan Feduccia's views is he asserts that there are unknown reptilian ancestors that evolved into birds.
Since they haven't been found (and may not exist) we can't test them against the theropod hypothesis. So his view of bird evolution is untestable until he can point to actual fossils he thinks are ancestors.
Birds are dinosaurs.
Barney is a dinosaur | |
No, you misunderstood what I was saying. Feduccia says that there are reptilian *groups* INSTEAD of theropods that are ancestral to birds but they are cryptic and we don't have fossils of them. He says that theropods aren't ancestral to birds and their similarities represent convergent evolution. You can't do cladistics analysis on fossils to determine if his hypothesis is correct without having fossils of those organisms he says are the *real* ancestral groups.So I guess your view on the origin of human beings is untestable (and therefore unscientific) until you can find a fossil that you think is an actual human ancestor rather than a side-branch.
No, you misunderstood what I was saying.
Feduccia says that there are reptilian *groups* INSTEAD of theropods that are ancestral to birds but they are cryptic and we don't have fossils of them.
He says that theropods aren't ancestral to birds and their similarities represent convergent evolution. You can't do cladistics analysis on fossils to determine if his hypothesis is correct without having fossils of those organisms he says are the *real* ancestral groups.
I am not saying the individual organisms in the fossils themselves must be ancestral to anything since you can't know that
The Denisovans may have contributed to at least some modern humans as have Neanderthals. We can tell that because there's actually DNA left, which is far better than just bones.I don't think so. You said "So his view of bird evolution is untestable until he can point to actual fossils he thinks are ancestors."
What's good for the goose is good for the gander. If his views concerning bird evolution are untestable (and therefore unscientific), then so are your views concerning human evolution. Unless you can come up with a fossil that you believe is a direct human ancestor. Do you have one?
I'm not talking species, I'm talking groups of organisms. The fossils in question may be offshoots but represent a group that was ancestral. It's hard to know what is a species when looking at fossils anyway.I know you're not saying that. I'm cool with any pretty much any representative of the species in question. Just give me something more than a couple of teeth, okay?
The Denisovans may have contributed to at least some modern humans as have Neanderthals.
We can tell that because there's actually DNA left, which is far better than just bones.
I'm not talking species, I'm talking groups of organisms. The fossils in question may be offshoots but represent a group that was ancestral.
It's hard to know what is a species when looking at fossils anyway.
Then what's wrong with Feduccia's archosaurs? I've seen a couple that weren't dinosaurs, but were quite theropod-like (Shuvosaurus, for example). They could be offshoots that represent the group from which birds sprang.
Alan Feduccia is an ornithologist, and he's says it's a bird. What are you?
"Archaeopteryx is clearly transitory between reptiles and birds..." |
Apparently, you are quoting Feduccia out of context.
They could be, but you're missing everything in between (Shuvorsaurus is from back in the triassic) and we have the feathered dinosaurs that have been found. So either feathers evolved early and were lost in some lineages and magically appeared in some dinosaur lineages through convergent evolution (meaning flight feathers evolved twice) or all the feathered dinosaurs are actually flightless birds.
Any of those possibilities are less parsimonious than simply linking dinosaurs to birds. And in making evolutionary hypotheses, maximum parsimony is preferred.
These are all *possible* but with our currently available materials we can't test them very well since we can't tell convergent evolution if there's nothing else to compare that the organism is converging on. Until there is strong evidence to contradict it, the Theropod hypothesis for the origin of birds is a good one. And as we are getting more data a lot of the problems are getting cleared up and MORE problems are being created for Feduccia's ideas.