BillyBonnie
New Member
For all of history, only the strongest and fittest members of each species has survived...It's evolution's way of ensuring that each species remains as strong as possible from generation to generation...only the strongest and fittest survive. All well and good.
But modern humans, with their big brains, have discovered ways to sidestep evolution's age-old way of ensuring "survival of the fittest", and strength of the gene pool. Specifically, modern humans have discovered ways (through medical "advancements") to allow people to survive who would have not survived in years past. Diabetes sufferers, people with terrible eyesight, kids with leukemia, people with congenital heart disease, people with suicidal tendencies, people with tendencies to develop cancers, etc.
Thus, these heretofore early "diers" are now living long enough to pass their genes on to the gene pool.
Is this a good thing?
Please understand, this post is not meant to incite angry responses. Rather, it's meant to elicit mature (albeit possibly emotional) responses.
All rational opinions welcome.
But modern humans, with their big brains, have discovered ways to sidestep evolution's age-old way of ensuring "survival of the fittest", and strength of the gene pool. Specifically, modern humans have discovered ways (through medical "advancements") to allow people to survive who would have not survived in years past. Diabetes sufferers, people with terrible eyesight, kids with leukemia, people with congenital heart disease, people with suicidal tendencies, people with tendencies to develop cancers, etc.
Thus, these heretofore early "diers" are now living long enough to pass their genes on to the gene pool.
Is this a good thing?
Please understand, this post is not meant to incite angry responses. Rather, it's meant to elicit mature (albeit possibly emotional) responses.
All rational opinions welcome.