Animals, in general, didn't seem to be very good at resisting novel diseases prior to the invention of modern medicine. The plague (Yersinia pestis) wiped out 1/3 of the European population and it wiped out a lot of other populations elsewhere. Were people who lived before modern medicine better at resisting more familiar, less novel diseases? Maybe. Before modern sanitation people were regularly exposed to more bacteria and viruses. They may have been resistant to some frequently encountered pathogens found in food and water. But people definitely got sick from these common pathogens. — Bitter Crank
Maybe the Shetlands sheep, evolved in the much colder, wetter north sea Islands got their harmful pathogens from the hotter, drier-evolved Churro sheep. — Bitter Crank
By saving lives, is medicine holding onto genetic stuff that Nature would have gotten rid of — Mongrel
In rapidly reproducing species (rats, for example) there is a greater chance of genetic change over a given period of time. But rats don't get a lot of medical care — Bitter Crank
There have been people who would say humans should be looked at in the same way we look at sheep. Medicine provides artificial robustness. Take away the medicine and nature would reveal the hidden weakness, devastating human populations in the process.
How would you answer that? — Mongrel
There have been people who would say humans should be looked at in the same way we look at sheep. Medicine provides artificial robustness. Take away the medicine and nature would reveal the hidden weakness, devastating human populations in the process. — Mongrel
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