Is the human race getting weaker?
#1
Posted 27 September 2005 - 08:39 PM
People who are idiot/stupid are able to recieve healthcare instead of dieing and there for reproducing. This process cancels out the whole process of natural selection. Therefore as a whole this would mean that the human race would be getting more idiotic.
Your opinions?
#3
Posted 27 September 2005 - 11:49 PM
Anyways, I think that in ways we are weaker and stronger.
In terms of physique, yes, we are getting weaker. Just look at our ancestors...they hunted and strove to survive by killing animals much larger than themselves. They almost completely wiped out predators in certain areas, if not making them extinct all together. We had to adapt to a rapidly changing environment, and we succeeded. Today, however, we no longer have anything to strive for. We aren't fighting to survive, unless a country is in a war, and although alot of things are wrong in the world, most people live easier lives.
But there are always two sides to every coin. Though we grow weaker in terms of strength and speed, we grow stronger in our intelligence. As we evolve we are growing smarter and wiser, learning from our mistakes unlike other animals. We are able to perceive things that we would deem impossible thousands, even hundreds of years ago. Just think of how far we have come in this last decade, this last century. We have advanced beyond anyones expectations (except for Star Trek fanatics, they never cease to amaze me).

So in one way, we are weaker. In another we have grown much stronger than we ever were before.

#4
Posted 28 September 2005 - 03:29 AM
#5
Posted 28 September 2005 - 03:49 PM
#6
Posted 28 September 2005 - 04:23 PM
#7
Posted 28 September 2005 - 08:42 PM
Our laziness causes our physical body to degrade to the point of a major heart problems. Our diets really suck too. The fast food craze has spread across the world.
We don't really push our intelligence much unless it's completely needed. People work often the same exact way for the last 5-20 years. Why do something new when it's easier to stick to the same process? It means no improvements or ideas are being made, but why should advancement matter any?

And, of course, the baby problem. A man with a crippling genetic disorder can have 5-10 children while alive, all of which can get it and cause 5-10 new doomed babies.

Technology helps but it can't do everything. It can help my heart, but not replace it. It can help raise farm animals, but humans still have to do something.
#8
Posted 28 September 2005 - 11:28 PM
No, we're not as good at using spears and clubs to kill large animals. But do we need to be? In a sense, we've evolved further along our path since our days as cavemen and harnessed that intelligence that distinguishes us from other animals much more thoroughly.
Humanity has guns, dynamite, and nuclear weapons. We have electricity, knowledge of the universe, synthetic elements, and about a bajillion other scientific discoveries of the past millenium. Pretty sure those make us stronger and not weaker.
I bow to the supreme wrath of Lord Crescens.
#9
Posted 29 September 2005 - 01:54 AM
if a man has a thousand fish but does not know how to catch it himself, can you call him stronger or generally better off than the man who depletes his supply of fish everyday but nevertheless knows how to catch more?
similarly, compared to what we had before, yes, we are more capable and possess more knowledge. however, the rate at which we're improving upon that which we already have isn't really phenomenal; think of the past - the wheel, democratic governments, Newton's Theory of Gravitation, and everything in between. do you see any similar breakthroughs happening today? some radical new idea changing the face of the world? all i see is a major crisis about to happen because all of our modern technologies, for all they are worth, have come to depend upon non-renewable energy sources dating back to before man even walked the earth (aka oil), and we don't know how to change that quickly enough.
what you mean to say is that we humans are much better off than we were before. but strength is determined by how we could keep making our situation better, not what our situation is right now.
#10
Posted 29 September 2005 - 10:48 AM
An as for incredible breakthroughs in technology, you're using one. I have yet to fully comprehend how a machine that detects a series of yes's and no's can do so much. I have't the slightest clue, but I use i and program on it taking forgranted that someone, somewhere was smart enough to make a yes do this and a no do that so that I may pwn some n00bs on the internet. Man has progressed in terms of understanding the universe more in the last decade than it has throughout our existance. The same will be true for the next decade. We learn at an exponential rate. The problem is, our minds are so desensitized to new, amazing technology, that we don't even realize it significance.
And, regardless of how mean this is, some people should NOT be allowed to breed.

GWAMM
#11
Posted 29 September 2005 - 05:16 PM
I bow to the supreme wrath of Lord Crescens.
#13
Posted 30 September 2005 - 04:13 AM
An as for incredible breakthroughs in technology, you're using one. I have yet to fully comprehend how a machine that detects a series of yes's and no's can do so much. I have't the slightest clue, but I use i and program on it taking forgranted that someone, somewhere was smart enough to make a yes do this and a no do that so that I may pwn some n00bs on the internet. Man has progressed in terms of understanding the universe more in the last decade than it has throughout our existance. The same will be true for the next decade. We learn at an exponential rate. The problem is, our minds are so desensitized to new, amazing technology, that we don't even realize it significance.
And, regardless of how mean this is, some people should NOT be allowed to breed.
yet, you might find that in the future it will get harder (financially) to keep using this marvelous technology because petroleum - the substance used to produce the plastics that frame the monitor and various other parts of the computer, and also produce the electricity used to power the computer itself and the ISPs that keep you online - is becoming more and more expensive because we have all become so profoundly dependent on it. yes, it makes life easier. in fact, that's the reason for our dependence on technology; because it makes life easier.
however, what happens when there's just not enough of it (oil) for our technological demands? those who have progressed least in terms of technology will be best off. it's not that i fail to recognize modern technology's significance, but that i see the catch that comes with it.
we've built a huge technological monument, but we've built it on ice that's been thinning for over a century now. i call that a mistake rather than a breakthrough.
i'm not trying to denounce modern technology. all i'm saying is that, for all the marvels that it can perform, it still relies heavily on a non-renewable source whose production, by all probability, will peak soon.
and, according to some experts, particularly one by the name of Matthew Simmons, peak oil isn't far from today.
This post has been edited by Kaezion: 30 September 2005 - 04:17 AM
#14
Posted 30 September 2005 - 12:38 PM
Look at the fuel crisis! when the worlds run dry of gas petrol and oil the world of humans will colapse basicly.. no heating no factorys to make food.. no transport to bring the food to the shops..
Years ago people had to do everything themselves.. and the ones that didnt or couldnt didnt last.
#15
Posted 30 September 2005 - 04:17 PM
Look at the fuel crisis! when the worlds run dry of gas petrol and oil the world of humans will colapse basicly.. no heating no factorys to make food.. no transport to bring the food to the shops..
Years ago people had to do everything themselves.. and the ones that didnt or couldnt didnt last.
We already have several alternatives to oil in development and several that are already functioning.