matttyl
Footballguy
I'm a huge fan of nature shows like "Life" and "Earth." Recently started watching a new one on Netflix called "Life Stories", which apparently follows a creature from birth (or hatching) until adulthood. A line from it really struck me, and got me thinking - it was something like "the goal of life for these creatures is to produce offspring, the closest thing to immortality."
That got me thinking if that's the case for humans as well - and for a long, long time in the "hunter/gatherer" days I'm sure it was. Don't get eaten or killed long enough to procreate and produce offspring, and raise them to the age where they could do the same. In modern society, though - we as humans don't have to worry so much about being eaten by the sabertooth tiger or other predator, or (at least on a percentage basis) being killed by other potentially stronger/smarter humans for whatever reason. You know, survival of the fittest type stuff. Over the entire timeline of "humans", that change has actually been somewhat recently - maybe a few hundred years (roughly only 20 generations from the "old world's" discovery of the "new world"). Through modern medicine and modern society, there is a far, far, far greater chance for a human to survive long enough to produce offspring - so "evolution" in the Darwin sense of the word doesn't really apply any more.
With that in mind (assuming any basis for that thought process), are we as humans evolving - or considering there is no longer any "survival of the fittest" situation, are we devolving?
That got me thinking if that's the case for humans as well - and for a long, long time in the "hunter/gatherer" days I'm sure it was. Don't get eaten or killed long enough to procreate and produce offspring, and raise them to the age where they could do the same. In modern society, though - we as humans don't have to worry so much about being eaten by the sabertooth tiger or other predator, or (at least on a percentage basis) being killed by other potentially stronger/smarter humans for whatever reason. You know, survival of the fittest type stuff. Over the entire timeline of "humans", that change has actually been somewhat recently - maybe a few hundred years (roughly only 20 generations from the "old world's" discovery of the "new world"). Through modern medicine and modern society, there is a far, far, far greater chance for a human to survive long enough to produce offspring - so "evolution" in the Darwin sense of the word doesn't really apply any more.
With that in mind (assuming any basis for that thought process), are we as humans evolving - or considering there is no longer any "survival of the fittest" situation, are we devolving?