Yes. We can't turn our backs on nature. Or rather, we can, but it won't amount to anything, as we will still be subject to its laws. Specifically, evolution is ongoing all the time with human race, as is this "survival of the fittest". What you don't seem to grasp is that the "fittest" here refers to individuals with the greatest fitness, a term biologists use to describe the amount of viable offspring said individual produces.Steven Snyder wrote:Nature doesn't intend on us doing anything, it is not a sentient being and therefore has no intentions, it simply is. Evolution is the mechanism in which we were created, it is evolution and it's servant 'Survival of the Fittest" that we have turned our back on. Care to disagree with that?Kaljamaha wrote:I'm sorry, I had to register just to respond to this madness. Mostly in response to Snyder.
First of all, what the hell is this "doing as nature intended" crap? You presume to know what nature intends? That alone makes you nutty, as nature doesn't intend anything. Nature IS. You probably think that evolution has a direction too, a goal it is progressing towards, yes? Care to explain what it is exactly that nature intends?
It is obvious that you missed my point. These people have a choice, and if they choose to have less kids in favor of becoming socially/financially successful, they will have a worse fitness. Therefore, thinking in evolutionary terms, they are less successful.Steven Snyder wrote:Well lets see here...it seems obvious that you do not understand how people become rich and successful.Kaljamaha wrote:Why is it that you want to prevent some people from reproducing, instead of doing the much more humane thing of encouraging the "rich and successful" people to have more kids?
*snipped a lot of text on how successfull people don't have time for kids.*
Again, this is their choice.Steven Snyder wrote:Maybe because they are too busy?
Maybe. Now, care to estimate the number of lives saved by compassion? Besides, compassion predates society. So why wasn't this trait selected against when humans were still hunter-gatherers?Steven Snyder wrote: Wow...this is just too easy. There are countless examples through history where a society has suffered needless casualties because they were just too compassionate to do the right thing.
Err, compassion does NOT equal social welfare. What, you think that before social programs were implemented, people were self-centered bastards who's only interest in other people was to directly benefit from them?Steven Snyder wrote:Whoa there. We hadn't really turned our backs on natural selection until we implemented social welfare, which allowed everyone to survive and have kids. Are you suggesting that social welfare has been around before recorded history?
All I see is that the prevalence of CF is rising, not the incidence, which is what you would expect, as our medical capabilities rise.Steven Snyder wrote:http://www.sghms.ac.uk/depts/laia/952.pdf
The number of cases if Cystic Fibrosis rises each and every year.There, a direct quote from a health professional saying that genetic diseases are on the rise.
*snip*
Marina Frontali, Istituto di Medicina Sperimentale del CNR, Frascati (Roma)
Yup, must have missed those. In which journal have they appeared?Steven Snyder wrote:It seems you haven't been reading the research and statistics which clearly says things are getting worse and the number of stupid people are increasing.
Your knowlegde of genetics is just stellar.Steven Snyder wrote:Now then. If you persist in this opinion, do me a favor.
State for the group that a popluation's genetic health is not affected by the influx of genes (recessive and dominate) that cause genetic diseases. And that this group's genetic well-being is just as good as a population whose environment selects out those individuals and prevents those genes from entry into the genome.
Just say that for the group so that we all understand your point.
Care to point out exactly how this influx of bad genes is happening? Granted, if one were to manufacture a strain of say, Drosophila, with an inordinate amount of defective genes, that population would obviously be inferior and less viable than a wild type one. However, this has dick to do with reality. There is no influx. What is happenin is a constant change in allele frequencies, which in turns produces new combinations from a near infinite range of possibilities. Change = Good.