randman said:
That was true since it predates Darwinism but whether you want to talk about phylogenies or whatever, point 1 is much more basic than that.
No, it's not. You are misapplying your criteria, as I've explained at length and which the book I referenced clearly demonstrates.
To say ND does not predict or explain this is to say ND does not explain how organisms arrived here.
This is a perfect example. "How organisms arrived here" is abiogenesis, NOT evolution.
This should not be a controversial statement on my part. It's not an argument for or against anything except to say ND claims all life, which includes organisms that cannot reproduce, evolved through sequential speciation instead of, for example, saltation, which is an entirely different mechanism for evolution that was rejected by Neodarwinists.
Please re-read my post; you appear to have missed most of it. My point was that YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND WHAT EVOLUTION SAYS. Therefore you are not in a possition to comment on the validity of the theory of evolution. Read the books I've referenced, in this thread and others, and then get back to us once you've cleared up your basic misunderstandings.
At the very least I've demonstrated that your attempt to summarize the modern view of taxonomy is hopelessly incomplete. Mine is an order of magnitude longer than yours and I consider mine an incomplete mess. Dr. Valentine's work is three orders of magnitude longer than mine and he considers HIS incomplete. You're attempting to discuss one of the most complex concepts in biology in two paragraphs.
It cannot be done.
As for how larger clades arose, I've explained that in my post. Please read it again.
Not really relevant to Point 1 in the OP at all, but still, how does mass extinction relate to not seeing ancestral humanoid species in a smooth transition?
I never said that mass extinctions relate to not seeing ancestrial humanoid species in a smooth transition. I said that the reason we see apes and humans as being as different as we do is because the species between us all died out, leaving us with a biased view of biology. When you prune 99% or more of the branches on the tree of life, what you're left with is a very few, very widely scattered branches that appear to be very different. When you actually look at the tree as a whole, those differences disapear.
ETA:
randman said:
That's all well and good but it has nothing to do with Point 1 as you claimed.
Look, if you're unwilliing to even pay attention to what I write, why should I take you seriously? The quote you quoted SPECIFICALLY discusses the origin of large clades, both in terms of the actual events and in terms of taxonomic theory.