Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
For Ed's sake, folks, there are thin spaces between the ellipsis points! Best we can do here, though, is regular spaces: . . .
~~ Paul
~~ Paul
Eos of the Eons said:So what do you think is in store with what is happening with us and the planet, etc? I can think of a ton of unspecialized creatures that are doing quite well, but they are so successful that they don't need to evolve much more.
Do you think we've reached that state? Crocodiles and cockroaches haven't changed much in eons.
What could possibly be the next step in evolution? What human trait could help us survive a certain scenario that would cause (survivors) us to have a primary trait that would lead us onto another evolutionary path?
I'm trying to envision some next step, but my mind just stalls.
gotta differ with you here, PaulPaul C. Anagnostopoulos said:For Ed's sake, folks, there are thin spaces between the ellipsis points! Best we can do here, though, is regular spaces: . . .
~~ Paul
The example from this page has no more space between the dots than it does between letters (of course, those are thin spaces, but....) http://ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/marks/ellipsis.htmAn ellipsis [ … ] proves to be a handy device when you're quoting material and you want to omit some words. The ellipsis consists of three evenly spaced dots (periods) with spaces between the ellipsis and surrounding letters or other marks.
"...strong selection pressure, we could be forgiven for thinking, might be expected to lead to rapid evolution. Instead, what we find is that natural selection exerts a braking effect on evolution. The baseline rate of evolution, in the absence of natural selection, is the maximum possible rate. That is synonymous with the mutation rate." --DawkinsOriginally posted by wjousts
Human society has made it possible for even the weakest, most mentally challenged, or just plain uglest people to survive and reproduce so there is really very little pressure to weed out any bad genes.
Dymanic said:
"...strong selection pressure, we could be forgiven for thinking, might be expected to lead to rapid evolution. Instead, what we find is that natural selection exerts a braking effect on evolution. The baseline rate of evolution, in the absence of natural selection, is the maximum possible rate. That is synonymous with the mutation rate." --Dawkins
wjousts said:My take is that baring major global catastrophe that wipes out a good 80-90% of the entire human race, isolates the few survivors in distance places and keeps them that way for several thousand years, we are pretty much done with biological evolution. Once we developed complex brains a new replicator entered the world, the meme, and is now the primary source of our "evolution".
Human society has made it possible for even the weakest, most mentally challenged, or just plain uglest people to survive and reproduce so there is really very little pressure to weed out any bad genes. In human society potential cripling or deadly conditions can be over come.
Denise said:...Elephants, no language no hands...
I came here for an argument.Originally posted by wjousts
I'm note sure if you quoted that to agree or disagree with my comment?
I think this is:I don't think what I said is in anyway at odds with what Dawkins is saying.
I still struggle with the concept that minimum selection equals maximum evolution. One reason I look for opportunities to bat this back and forth is the hope that I will eventually become comfortable with it. If I understand the implications of this correctly, then the opposite of what you say is true; it is selective pressure which would tend to keep humans looking pretty much the same.Without strong selection pressure humans will continue to look pretty much like humans on average.
Oh... I'm sorry! This is Abuse!Dymanic said:I came here for an argument.
I think we need a clarification in terms. 'Evolution' is being used here in the sense of genetic change. Minimum selection equals maximum genetic drift. "Meaningful" change is maximized when there's a proper balance between mutation and selection.I still struggle with the concept that minimum selection equals maximum evolution.
In terms of genetic change, we're still evolving: the genes that prove most successful at propagating themselves in our own, self-created environments will become more common. Unfortunately, I suspect the result will be similar to what happens when ideas aren't forced to be weeded out by conflicts with reality, and people are free to develop whatever nonsense they like in an artificially safe world: the genetic equivalents of woo-wooism.I agree about the meme thing of course -- except that it isn't quite so clear how that constitutes us evolving.
Wrath of the Swarm said:I think we need a clarification in terms. 'Evolution' is being used here in the sense of genetic change. Minimum selection equals maximum genetic drift.
Wrath of the Swarm said:"Meaningful" change is maximized when there's a proper balance between mutation and selection.
Wrath of the Swarm said:Without selective pressures to maintain a genome, random mutation will eventually erase all traits not necessary for survival. Too much selection, and diversity enters a bottleneck (which isn't a good strategy in the long term); too much mutation, and the adaptive genomes are lost in static.
Wrath of the Swarm said:In terms of genetic change, we're still evolving: the genes that prove most successful at propagating themselves in our own, self-created environments will become more common.
Wrath of the Swarm said:Unfortunately, I suspect the result will be similar to what happens when ideas aren't forced to be weeded out by conflicts with reality, and people are free to develop whatever nonsense they like in an artificially safe world: the genetic equivalents of woo-wooism.
Hopefully we'll reach transhumanity before that happens.
I agree. It isn't going to go anywhere interesting, anyway. (And welcome aboard, BTW).Originally posted by wjousts
But the average, in the absence of selection pressure, [evolution] isn't going to go anywhere. Which I took as being what Eos of the Eons was getting at.
Yes. And by 'meaningful', or 'interesting', what we are looking for is 'cumulative complexity' -- something which occurs only when selection is at work.Originally posted by Wrath of the Swarm
Minimum selection equals maximum genetic drift. "Meaningful" change is maximized when there's a proper balance between mutation and selection.
An interesting take on the subject. I think I see what you're getting at. With little pressure to weed out bad genes, all kinds of genetic crap will accumulate and be tolerated within the population. I think in general for the survival of any species such periods are actually a good thing, because when the environment changes what used to be crap can suddenly become gold.
Of course it might be argued that scientists are yet another ingenious innovation on the part of genes.Originally posted by (S)
I /suppose/ you might say that the natural immunity of a single person saved us, in that case, but I would not. I would say that the ingenuity of the scientists, to track down and extrapolate off of a natural immunity found in the vastness of first the gene pool and second the makeup of that individual.
Dymanic said:Of course it might be argued that scientists are yet another ingenious innovation on the part of genes.
(S) said:I think we're past the point that our genes will really be our saving grace.
Take what is probably the prime 'test case': HIV. Every so often, someone will muse that there might be someone out there that is 'immune' to HIV. That's all fine and lovely, but truth-be-told, it doesn't help us very much /unless/ our memes take over, find that person, and create an actual cure using their immunity as a blueprint.
I /suppose/ you might say that the natural immunity of a single person saved us, in that case, but I would not. I would say that the ingenuity of the scientists, to track down and extrapolate off of a natural immunity found in the vastness of first the gene pool and second the makeup of that individual. It's a collosal task, and it would have been carried out not by our genes but by human minds and technology. For our genes to really save us in this case, the natural immunity would have to spread through the gene pool by its own means, something which would take five hundred or a thousand years, optimistically.
In the end, a cure will likely be derived through work and technology, but without the good fortune of finding a magic cure in some corner of the gene pool. I do think humans are in the best position ever to survive anything, but I think our gene pool is incidental to this.