It's a subject that comes up fairly often here (Understandably) and very strong opinions are expressed. Much of the discussion seems to be counterproductive.
I'd like to propose a different approach. We all know what each other's conclusions are (Or at least we should by now)
Let's talk about our methodology instead. To that end, consider the picture below:
Above is a series of skull models. From left to right, these are:
1. A. afarensis
2. A. africanus
3. H. habilis
4. H. erectus
5. H. heidelbergensis
6. H. neanderthalensis
7. H. sapiens sapiens
8. H. sapiens
I'm making absolutely no claim of evolutionary relationship via this picture. Remember that taxonomy was an established science long before Darwin came on the scene. These represent only a morphological gradient.
How would you decide which of these are truly ape and which of these are truly human and why? Where would you draw the line and why? There's no right or wrong answer here. I'm not interested in what you think nearly so much as why you think what you think.
There's only one rule. --No logical fallacies. No ad hoc explanations, no special pleading, no generalization, etc.