Jodie said:
How do you determine whether the data is sound if you don't have a basic grasp of statistics? Take the researcher's word for it?
You learn the field. If you refuse to do that, than yes, you are obliged to take the researchers' word on the topic. Please note that I'm not saying anything about you--I always point out at this point that for me, electricity falls firmly into this category. I don't know it, so I leave it to the experts to figure it out. I use what they determine, as best as my limited knowledge can determine.
As for the requirement to have a collection of a certain size before you can say something is a new species, there are a few flaws in this.
First, there's the fact that there are statistical methods for determining the probability of a sample falling within a known population. In fact, that's what standard deviations are often used for--if you are more than two or three standard deviations from the mean, there's a very high likelyhood that you are not a member of that population. Since we have LOTS of human bones, we can calculate with some degree of confidence whether or not an individual specimen is
H. sapiens sapiens or not. Thus, statistical analysis disagrees with your conclusion.
But I'm still willing to entertain your idea. In order to demonstrate its validity, please list the assumptions your equation makes when applied to paleontological data.
Second, the concept of "species" is an issue. The precise place where you divide two species has always been fuzzy. We can determine the range it must fall in, but by necessity any two related species are extremely similar to each other during and immediately after speciation. Speciation isn't typically allopatric; in fact, I'd say it's more akin to ring species. One species develops numerous subpopulations, which diverge from one another over time. At some point, something happens that removes the intermediate forms (remember, at the time that event occurs they are still considered one species); after the event, the populations become their own species. OF COURSE we will find intermediates showing that at one point all these species were one; that's trivially obvious to anyone with any knowledge of evolution. This doesn't change the fact that AFTER the event they are different species. Normally this isn't an issue; speciation happens so fast that we generally only get a few intermediates to deal with. And frankly no one's interested in speciation events in brachiopods or Callianasids or the like. Humans, though, occur extremely late in the fossil record, which means we have a very fine-scale record of them, and they are intensely studied (the mere fact that their study has its own special name is proof of that). That means that we need to address edge issues that are normally irrelevant.
Vortigern99 said:
I find it remarkable that you place such primacy on the one area in which you appear to be well-educated, and that you judge others' intellectual capacities based on our familiarity with that single subject.
I don't. I've found that those who have fetishes for particular fields of knowledge tend to judge everyone based on their understanding of those fields, regardless of the validity of that judgement. Sheldon Cooper is extreme, but he's only different in degree, not in type. I've run across physicists that actually do think that anything other than physics is a waste of time. I've also met minerologists who insist that anything else isn't REAL geology ('All rock is made of minerals!"), chemists who insist that ecologists and taxonomists are ignorant because they don't know chemistry, etc. Some people latch onto a single idea, and forget that there's a wider world of knowledge. Unfortunately, statistics tends to either attract such people, or at least provide enough positive feedback that they conclude that in their case, they're right. Try arguing that one can conduct science in ordinary language on this very board sometime. I have--and the results were a rather rabid chorus of "Science requries statistics!!!!"