I see that no one was able to aswer your question even though they were sure we don't come from monkeys they still dodged the real question maybe you should ask it again without the mention of monkeys.
2006-06-19 05:48:05
·
answer #1
·
answered by david v 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
NO scientist has EVER said we come from monkeys, apes or lower life forms.
Even 250,000 years ago when the earliest human fossils originated, they were most definitely and obviously HUMAN.
They were about three feet tall, and most probably covered with hair, and had small brains and flat heads, but they were
MOST DEFINITELY NOT APES MONKEYS OR LOWER LIFE FORMS. The were humans.
They walked upright. They used tools to hunt and prepare food.
They lived in family groups and tribes.
They did not live in trees.
We are the ONLY species that walks upright.
That and tool making are the main things that differentiate
humans from the rest of the animal kingdon.
I wish people would at least know enough about science to not make assumptions that scientists said we come from
apes or monkeys. We have ALWAYS been humans,
from the very beginning, even though we looked much
different from the way we look now.
If you mean where did we, meaning ALL life, come from,
then we came from single celled organisms that evolved from a stew of amino acids which are found everywhere in the universe.
Where did the amino acids, which are the building blocks of all life on Earth, come from? They are found flying around in all comets in the solar system, and it is probable that in the early stages of Earth when it was being bombarded with space debris, comets and debris from the big bang, loaded with amino acids, crashed into the Earth and found conditions, climate and water supply, favorable to group into life forms, namely micorscopic biological organisms, which continued changing and developing newer and better ways of going about the business of eating, mating, and finding food. Over millions and millions of years, fish crawled up onto the land, developed legs, arms and all the other types of diversity we see.
It seems it is hard for many people to grasp the many millions of years involved but time is what God uses to create life.
I am an evolutionist who, like most of us, believes God created life using the tool of time.
2006-06-19 12:16:01
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
The question is not where did man come from, which assumes we have some special place at the top of the evolutionary ladder. The question could equally have been where did chimpanzees come from, or dogs or whales or mosquitos. The answer is that they developed from an earlier different common ancestor. The fact that mankind and chimpanzees evolved from a common ancestor seems to give some people problems. If you believe in evolution then you accept a common ancestor for mankind and chimpanzees and also mankind and dogs, it does not mean that man evolved from chimpanzees any more than man evolved from dogs. Each of them is the current end result of evolution. The chimpanzee is the end result of its evolution, it has evolved to fit a niche in the ecosystem over thousands and thousands of years just as we have. Neither of us evolved from the other.
2006-06-19 12:32:09
·
answer #3
·
answered by david o 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
You should really try reading a book on evolution.
No we did not evolve from monkeys or apes ... they were evolving from earlier versions of themselves at the same time.
And where in the seven holy hells do you ever fit in "reincarnation" into evolution .. that is just silly.
read ... study .... evolution is one of the most elegant, beautiful and enlightening theories ever found.
2006-06-19 12:16:21
·
answer #4
·
answered by sam21462 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
Evolutionists and creationists and every thing that ever was, is and ever will be, came from the same place. Carl Sagan described it best: "We are all star stuff."
2006-06-19 13:50:34
·
answer #5
·
answered by Sweetchild Danielle 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
they think we came from fish, personally my ancestors were human
2006-06-19 12:14:11
·
answer #6
·
answered by Rufus 4
·
0⤊
0⤋