Monty Python--This New Learning Amazes Me - YouTube
ain't book-learnin' grand
Monty Python--This New Learning Amazes Me - YouTube
ain't book-learnin' grand
Actually modern consensus is that we didn't evolve from a common ancestor, although I'm wondering what you evolved from; you must be from some advanced species to have lamps growing out of your head.
Quote:
Homo sapiens are incredibly diverse — we live in wildly different societies, follow different rules and love and fear different gods.
Despite that awesome diversity, mounting evidence suggests the first humans were even more different from one another than we are today.
In a new commentary published online on Wednesday (July 11) in the journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution, an interdisciplinary group that includes geneticists, bioanthropologists, and archaeologists argues that we didn't evolve from a single population in a single region of Africa, but rather from separate populations across Africa that fully mixed only much later. [Image Gallery: Our Closest Human Ancestor]
Evidence is showing that "human ancestors were already scattered across Africa," said Eleanor Scerri, a research fellow at Oxford University and lead author of the paper. And "the combination of behavioral and physical and cognitive features that define us today started to slowly emerge within the occasional mixing of these different ancestral groups," she added. (Scerri is also a research associate for the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany.)
So basically we're all mongrels, so much for the master race.
:)