[Taxacom] New classification of Hominidae (incl. the "hobbit")

John Grehan jgrehan at sciencebuff.org
Fri May 1 07:40:11 CDT 2009


And of course I would agree that Ken should not back down just because someone (in this case myself) disagrees with the informativeness of his classification - just as I would not back down on the orangutan evidence just because just about no one in the primate systematics field else accepts it.

While my characterization of 'worthless' may be harsh (and no more harsh than the worthlessness of the orangutan theory condemned in the hominid origins field) I at least gave the basis for my characterization, and I stand by the view that a classification that lacks presentation of the systematics decision making process that leads to particular classification decisions is not of any real evaluative value. If others think otherwise on this list then I would be interested to hear.

Ken makes the point that the orangutan theory is accepted by very few biologists is neither here nor there for the science of classification. What people believe is not science.

John Grehan 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu [mailto:taxacom-
> bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Kenneth Kinman
> Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2009 9:33 PM
> To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
> Subject: [Taxacom] New classification of Hominidae (incl. the "hobbit")
> 
> Dear All,
>      I was asked to forward the post below to the list.  I thank Mark
> for his response, and my own response to it is that I indeed do not
> intend to back down.  I gave two perfectly good reasons for
> preliminarily assigning the "hobbit" (florensis) to early Homo erectus
> (sensu lato), and near georgicus in particular, and John Grehan offered
> neither a credible rebuttal to those reasons, nor any attempt to justify
> any alternate assignment.
>      Nor will I back down on the assignment of Kenyanthropus platyops to
> Australopithecus (and I suspect it will indeed prove to be a synonym of
> A. afarensis).  As for the proposed outgroups to Hominidae, Ardipithecus
> and Orrorin seem excellent candidates, although whether they clade
> together or separately remains to be seen.  Sahelanthropus is less
> certain and may end up clading with gorillas and/or chimps.  John
> Grehan's hypothesis of orangutans as an alternate outgroup to hominids,
> on the other hand, is obviously still accepted by very few biologists.
>        --------Ken Kinman
> -----------------------------------------------------
> Ken,
>      For some reason the listserve rejected my posting. Please forward
> it on my behalf.
> -Mark
> ------- Forwarded message follows -------
> From:  <farmer at cellmate.cb.uga.edu>
> Subject:  Re: [Taxacom] New classification of Hominidae (incl. the
> "hobbit")
> Date sent: Thu, 30 Apr 2009 20:32:14 -0400
> Dear Ken,
> I have never posted to this group before and my expertise is in protists
> (a long way from hominids) BUT I think that science only progresses by
> individuals putting forward new ideas and offering data in support of
> them (as opposed to creationist BS of "new ideas").
> 
> Ken, I am way out my area of comfort zone here but I think for the good
> of science you should not back down, UNLESS the data compels you to do
> so. I myself have abandoned my long held ideas about mitochondrial
> origins in the earliest eukaryotes, but it was the data and reasoned
> arguments that caused me to do so. That is the ESSENCE of good science.
> -Mark Farmer
> On 30 Apr 2009 at 16:59, Kenneth Kinman wrote:
> Dear All,
>        Well, if everyone agrees with John Grehan that my
> classifications are "pretty worthless", then maybe I should just stop.
> But I wouldn't post them if I didn't believe they would provide a useful
> new viewpoint (at least for some workers) compared to other available
> classifications.
> ------- End of forwarded message -------
> 
> 
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