Humans are vastly different in our genetic makeup and as vastly different as our religious beliefs.
In fact, Vincent Sarich, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Berkeley recently confirms this by comparing 29 different racial types of skulls (2500 human skulls in all) to two separate species of chimpanzees (347 skulls). His statistical analysis revealed standard deviations between some human racial groups to be more than twice that of the most dissimilar chimp species. The Teita of Kenya and the Buriat of central Russia had the most dissimilar human samples at 46%. The bonobo species (Pan paniscus) compared to the common chimp species (Pan troglodytes verus) provided a 20% difference. -- Vincent Sarich, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Berkeley, “The Final Taboo: Race Differences in Ability,” Skeptic, Summer, 2000.
“In the language of science, the terms race and ‘species’ are equivalent in their application to man. In the case of the lower animals we can speak only in terms of ‘species’; man has appropriated to himself a special term to denote the species into which he is divided, and that is ‘race.'" -- Sayce, Archibald Henry, “The Races of the Old Testament,” 2nd edition. London: The Religious Tract Society, 1893.
“. . . Between the various species of anthropoid apes, between those of the genus chimpanzee for example, the differences are less pronounced than between the principal human races. -- Topinard, Paul, “Anthropology,” 1878, pp. 506-511.
“Between the orangutan and the gorilla there is less distance than between the Australian and the Laplander. We cannot say more. The distinctive characteristics of the jackal and the dog, the wolf and the fox, the horse and the mule, the zebra, and the quagga, the camel and the dromedary, are scarcely more divergent, and are frequently less, than those our [human] types. -- Topinard, Paul, French Anthropologist. 1830 – 1911.
"Hybridity Inviability" is defined as being always genetically inferior to the overall health of the homogeneous parents. The Creator's original immutable design of each kind incorporates 'optimal balance' that is unique to only its kind, but is lost in hybridity.
Humans are vastly different in our genetic makeup and as vastly different as our religious beliefs.
“In the language of science, the terms race and ‘species’ are equivalent in their application to man. In the case of the lower animals we can speak only in terms of ‘species’; man has appropriated to himself a special term to denote the species into which he is divided, and that is ‘race.'" -- Sayce, Archibald Henry, “The Races of the Old Testament,” 2nd edition. London: The Religious Tract Society, 1893.
“. . . Between the various species of anthropoid apes, between those of the genus chimpanzee for example, the differences are less pronounced than between the principal human races. -- Topinard, Paul, “Anthropology,” 1878, pp. 506-511.
“Between the orangutan and the gorilla there is less distance than between the Australian and the Laplander. We cannot say more. The distinctive characteristics of the jackal and the dog, the wolf and the fox, the horse and the mule, the zebra, and the quagga, the camel and the dromedary, are scarcely more divergent, and are frequently less, than those our [human] types. -- Topinard, Paul, French Anthropologist. 1830 – 1911.
"Hybridity Inviability" is defined as being always genetically inferior to the overall health of the homogeneous parents. The Creator's original immutable design of each kind incorporates 'optimal balance' that is unique to only its kind, but is lost in hybridity.