Dags90 said:
That there is some sort of "rate" at which evolution normally occurs that can "speed up" and "slow down" is baseless.
I'm not saying there's a rate that evolution normally occurs at. It's a comparative discussion. Put simply "compared to the average rate of human evolution that we have witnessed over the last about 7 million years, will our current living conditions speed up, slow down or stall that process?" This "rate of evolution" being the amount of allele mutations that make it into the population, over long periods of time it is a measurable quantity performed by comparing the genetic make up of one species with the genetic make up of the species it evolved from. I'm aware we can never actually
know this answer because it will be too slow for anyone to witness, it's simply a question to gauge other peoples opinions.
CrystalShadow said:
This is a valid point. At times when resources are plentiful and threats are scarce all animals build up the population and get a wide variety of genetic mutations. This variety enables creatures to survive devastating events that may otherwise wipe out the species. A simplified example is if there is a population of bears, 98% have a thin coat and 2% have a thick coat. Suddenly there's a savage temperature swing and the bears with the thin coat start to die off leaving on the thick coated bears alive. However, this is an example of evolution by catastrophe and on the whole is not something we as humans have to worry about too much because we have control over our environment.
If that continues it means that individuals will continue to obtain these allele mutations, some of which will be beneficial, some negative and some will change nothing. Unless there is a drastic change in something (introduction of a new predator, downfall of society, 2012 disaster actually being real etc) these new mutations will take an exceedingly long time to diffuse into the population if they ever do. Again, I'm aware that this is kind of the point, however this kind of backs up my point that overall very little change will be witnessed.
Think of a bell curve, the vast majority will be in the centre "average" part of the distribution. With the weak surviving right along with the strong (I don't just mean physical strength, I mean intellect, team work, any trait basically) then that norm will never shift without some form of outside influence. Since my assertion was that humans have a solid control on outside influence this seems unlikely. Meaning yes, the weak can have offspring that are part of the norm, but this means the strong can have offspring that are weaker. Both of these are steps back to "the norm".
I'm not claiming this is something ground breaking or new and it has obviously occurred throughout the ages, my question is whether, in the modern age, our monopoly over the environment we live in can be broken thus ending the (for lack of a better word) "stagnation" of evolution away from the norm.
Also, talk of a hunter being in a different society isn't really relevant as that's more cultural evolution than physical or mental. Our cultural acceptances of what is right or wrong have changed which has nothing to do with our brain capacity or physical attributes. I suppose this could slide into a case of nature vs nurture, but in my opinion cultural evolution is not linked to physical evolution. There are still stories of holiday makers in places such as Dubai that get arrested and jailed for breaking local laws that they are unaware of or that our society no longer deems acceptable. Does that mean that humans in some developed countries are "more evolved" than humans from developing countries??