Edit: Seems the forum is eatting my poll options, so here's what they SHOULD be:
"No, All Life Is Precious And Should Be Preserved No Matter The Cost"
"Yes, I All Honest I Wouldn't Want To Put Myself And My Family Through Such Misery."
Warning: Large Chunk-o-Text inbound. Don't care if you don't read it, I'm going to write it anyways.
Do you think human evolution has reached stagnation? The process of Natural Selection by which creatures born with more advantageous traits (i.e. stronger, faster, smarter, etc) are able to survive more easily than the rest, ensuring that those with such advantages are the ones that pass along their genes to the next generation, thereby making them stronger, faster, smarter, etc seems to no longer hold affect over the human race. For starters, humans have no natural predators (by that I mean a creature whose lifestyle and diet are hunting, killing, and eating humans) and as such there's nothing to "thin the herd". Of course humans get killed by wild carnivorous animals every day, but to the vast majority of the species such is a thing that need not concern us.
In the wild, such predators play a process in evolution. They ensure that the creature who was born with a better camoflage coloration survive to pass on that coloration. They ensure that creatures able to outrun or outwit the predators survive to pass on their advantageous genes to the next generation. Survival of the fittest: The strong live, the weak die. Every now and then a creature in a species will be born with some sort of random mutation. If this mutation proves advantageous, then the creature survives to pass that mutation on. This is the process of evolution, as that mutation becomes "standard equipment" for the entire species over a long period of time.
But such is not the case when it comes to humans. For starters, as I mentioned, there's no driving force behind our evolution. We don't NEED to be stronger, faster, or smarter in order to ensure our survival and the passing on of our genes. You can be fat and lazy and make it through life just find. Manage to find yourself a mate, and your genes will get passed on whether they're advantageous or not. Beyond that - and getting to the topic's title as well as the poll - is the fact that we're the only species on the planet that actively and vigorously tries to save the weak. There's some herding animals that will help one of their own out if they're being attacked by predators, but for the most part, they prefer to simply write off the one being attacked as a loss. We, on the other hand, go out of our way to save the weak. Why? because we have rational thought which inevitably leads to the fact tha we have morals.
A baby is born with horrible birth defects, defects that can never be fully fixed. The child will have heart complications, breathing complications, and will have to live with a colostomy bag for its entire life. Were this baby an animal out in the wild, it would likely be left for dead, or it wouldn't last very long at all. But we spend thousands in medical bills, drag down an entire family in massive debt, all to save a baby who will never be able to live a normal life. This brings up the question of the poll: if you were to be completely honest with yourself, would you rather live your entire life with unending medical complications that ensure you'll never be able to live a normal life? Or would you honestly rather have simply been left for dead, saving you the perceived misery your family would be put through in keeping you alive?
Which brings us to the topic's title. Has the fact that mankind has rational thought - and therefor morals - brought an end to evolution for the human race? Will we ever transcend to something greater than what we currently are? Or have we officially stagnated, having reached the pinnacle of our species? Can it possibly be that one of the best arguments against the Theory of Evolution (but not an argument for Creationism, to be clear) is the fact that the process of Natural Selection does not apply to us as a species due to us being driven to preserve the lives of the weak no matter what the cost?
Note: I'm not saying that we should let everyone born with birth defects or stricken with illness or injury die. This is just a bit of food for thought and I'd like to hear what other people have to say about it.
TLDR: Is the movie Idiocracy one of the most terrifying films ever because the point it makes in the opening sequence can be seen as frighteningly accurate?
"No, All Life Is Precious And Should Be Preserved No Matter The Cost"
"Yes, I All Honest I Wouldn't Want To Put Myself And My Family Through Such Misery."
Warning: Large Chunk-o-Text inbound. Don't care if you don't read it, I'm going to write it anyways.
Do you think human evolution has reached stagnation? The process of Natural Selection by which creatures born with more advantageous traits (i.e. stronger, faster, smarter, etc) are able to survive more easily than the rest, ensuring that those with such advantages are the ones that pass along their genes to the next generation, thereby making them stronger, faster, smarter, etc seems to no longer hold affect over the human race. For starters, humans have no natural predators (by that I mean a creature whose lifestyle and diet are hunting, killing, and eating humans) and as such there's nothing to "thin the herd". Of course humans get killed by wild carnivorous animals every day, but to the vast majority of the species such is a thing that need not concern us.
In the wild, such predators play a process in evolution. They ensure that the creature who was born with a better camoflage coloration survive to pass on that coloration. They ensure that creatures able to outrun or outwit the predators survive to pass on their advantageous genes to the next generation. Survival of the fittest: The strong live, the weak die. Every now and then a creature in a species will be born with some sort of random mutation. If this mutation proves advantageous, then the creature survives to pass that mutation on. This is the process of evolution, as that mutation becomes "standard equipment" for the entire species over a long period of time.
But such is not the case when it comes to humans. For starters, as I mentioned, there's no driving force behind our evolution. We don't NEED to be stronger, faster, or smarter in order to ensure our survival and the passing on of our genes. You can be fat and lazy and make it through life just find. Manage to find yourself a mate, and your genes will get passed on whether they're advantageous or not. Beyond that - and getting to the topic's title as well as the poll - is the fact that we're the only species on the planet that actively and vigorously tries to save the weak. There's some herding animals that will help one of their own out if they're being attacked by predators, but for the most part, they prefer to simply write off the one being attacked as a loss. We, on the other hand, go out of our way to save the weak. Why? because we have rational thought which inevitably leads to the fact tha we have morals.
A baby is born with horrible birth defects, defects that can never be fully fixed. The child will have heart complications, breathing complications, and will have to live with a colostomy bag for its entire life. Were this baby an animal out in the wild, it would likely be left for dead, or it wouldn't last very long at all. But we spend thousands in medical bills, drag down an entire family in massive debt, all to save a baby who will never be able to live a normal life. This brings up the question of the poll: if you were to be completely honest with yourself, would you rather live your entire life with unending medical complications that ensure you'll never be able to live a normal life? Or would you honestly rather have simply been left for dead, saving you the perceived misery your family would be put through in keeping you alive?
Which brings us to the topic's title. Has the fact that mankind has rational thought - and therefor morals - brought an end to evolution for the human race? Will we ever transcend to something greater than what we currently are? Or have we officially stagnated, having reached the pinnacle of our species? Can it possibly be that one of the best arguments against the Theory of Evolution (but not an argument for Creationism, to be clear) is the fact that the process of Natural Selection does not apply to us as a species due to us being driven to preserve the lives of the weak no matter what the cost?
Note: I'm not saying that we should let everyone born with birth defects or stricken with illness or injury die. This is just a bit of food for thought and I'd like to hear what other people have to say about it.
TLDR: Is the movie Idiocracy one of the most terrifying films ever because the point it makes in the opening sequence can be seen as frighteningly accurate?