So what are these new traits humans have? — Andrew4Handel
Us, not them; the disabled don't get a say in this, because... they are disabled. They are not us. We are not disabled, despite wearing glasses, needing medication to reduce our blood pressure or surgery after that incident with the knee.should we let evolution do what it does best which is filter out the weak? — intrapersona
filter out the weak... — intrapersona
Simply put, should we let evolution do what it does best which is filter out the weak? — intrapersona
... humans are not so much evolving as selectively breeding, kind of like with dogs. — 0 thru 9
However I would like to learn more about evolution and how people think it is possible to evolve in an unnatural world. — bloodninja
You're conflating a biological theory with an ethical principle - which it isn't — Wayfarer
Besides, appealing to evolutionary fitness as a basis for ethics is close to 'eugenics' which is 'the science of improving a human population by controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable heritable characteristics. — Wayfarer
it is a mistake to project conclusions about what amounts to 'successfulness' on that basis; when you do, it always will sound very like eugenics or the justification of 'dog eat dog' capitalism on the basis of 'survival of the fittest'. — Wayfarer
This is where you have misunderstood the OP. It was about mental retardation and chronic disability that cause suffering. Not variation of intellectual abilities and character traits.For one thing, there is rarely genetic determinism when we are discussing people's intellectual abilities or character traits. — LD Saunders
This is one reason we see so many extinct species --- evolution does not always lead to optimum outcomes.
Therefore, the argument here is based on a faulty premise. — LD Saunders
what the OP is suggesting is a distorted view of the idea of survival of the fittest. It fails to understand that it is through evolution that we have recognized the need to take care of the sick, disabled, etc. To suggest otherwise implies a retardation (perhaps, a disability). — BrianW
Evolution filters out weaknesses not lives. The increase in the number of disabled people in productive fields both physical and intellectual, implies that we can learn to overcome inability in disability. Initially, way back in 'em days, we considered the disabled as failed human types and, in our ignorance, caused them a lot of suffering but, fortunately, presently, we have arrived at the realisation of how primitive that designation is. By incorporating deliberately directed and well-filtered human interactions with the disabled, we help them overcome the major limitation and threat which disability poses - social ostracism, which in turn leads to a larger host of issues. Finding ways to involve the disabled in all human activities has served as a therapeutic measure which has helped to counter some discomfitures. There is no doubt that the way to the future is through more integration and the outlook promises further success. Such is the true path of human evolution.
Isn't the statement, 'Disability is not inability!' a testament to our capacity to evolve? — BrianW
Is it the severely disabled continuing to live that bothers you, or is the "taxpayer supplied checks"? — Bitter Crank
Evolution led us to be care-givers as well as perfect survivor specimens. Evolution doesn't have a plan. It just grinds along powered by random mutations. It's not heading anywhere. We are not the apex of creation, and evolution wasn't trying to get us there (unless you entertain some teleological ideas about the omega point, etc.). — Bitter Crank
I do not think evolution is an entity that can make decisions rather it is posited to be a process of change. I think the idea that evolution weeds out the weak is very pernicious. There is no intent supposed to be involved in evolution. — Andrew4Handel
Anything that fails to survive and reproduce is weak regardless of physical abilities — Andrew4Handel
Fitness defined by survival is banal and vice versa unfitness — Andrew4Handel
Also we are part of nature so anything we do is tautologously a part of nature. there are no natural laws for human behaviour that we have to follow humans are massively flexible and creative. — Andrew4Handel
Evolution is a theory about the origin of species. The 'idea of progress' is another matter altogether. — Wayfarer
Can I just point out this is a really stupid understanding of evolution? That's not what fitness is. — MindForged
Us, not them; the disabled don't get a say in this, because... they are disabled. They are not us. We are not disabled, despite wearing glasses, needing medication to reduce our blood pressure or surgery after that incident with the knee.
There is a nasty lack of self reflection in the OP that reeks of a lack of breadth of experience. — Banno
But in a nutshell, he says that when humans remove themselves from the conditions in which they evolved, they cease to evolve. — 0 thru 9
The Mike Tyson’s of the world can pulverize the world’s Einsteins; therefore we should let ear-biting boxers rule and do away with the Einstein’s (the guy had a weird kind of dyslexia or some such, which, naturally, is a disability). For evolution is about the culling of the weak. — javra
The only reason disabled people are able to survive is because we have a (in my opinion) unjustified desire to keep them alive for some reason. Mainly brought about due to our fear of whether it is wrong to kill any innocent thing, and this of course may due to our violent history as a species and the changes that have come to be within our psychology over the last century — intrapersona
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.