BilZ0r
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2003
- Messages
- 6,675
paradoxcycle said:So should I kill myself being that I am a waste of energy? Or become a hermit?
Are you a wate of energy?
paradoxcycle said:So should I kill myself being that I am a waste of energy? Or become a hermit?
Grim said:Uhm, would you be saying then that evolution and genetics play no role in human society. We are all human, I agree but you can't ignore things like genetics and evolution. Everyone has differences and genetics play a big role in those differences otherwise we would all be the same. Therefore the IS such as thing gay, straight, black, white, tall, short, fat, skinny and a million other factors that make us different from another.
And if you try to avoid the obvious then you are the one walking with the blinders on.
I in no way have anything against gays or anyone of a different race, but you can't say that we are all the same. It's just a liberal PC bullshit that they are trying to feed you now. We need to learn to embrace other people's differences rather than saying that we are all the same.
As just a thought with the whole evolutionary perspective. It doesn't only theorize that you want the best for YOUR children or you work hardest to pass on your genes through YOUR children. Technically, the bonds of kinship (and thus genes) work throughout families as well, so having an uncle or aunt that do not have their own children would probably leave more time for them to care for the neice or nephew in the family. Thus they would be helping (in a way) to pass on some similar portion of their genes. In a world as busy and crazy as ours, with less and less time for children as compared to work lives and obligations, this might ensure a better chance for that child.It's only a "flaw" in an evolutionary sense. Evolutionarily, the "purpose" of an organism is to propagate its genes... in that sense, any characteristic which impedes successful baby-making would be a flaw.
That isn't true at all. It's passing genes along. That doesn't mean having more children in all situations. You might have one child but that child is more assured of making it all the way to maturity and thus an age of procreation. According to evolution that's more important than having 10 children of which none live to have children of their own.And fitness is defined by how many children they can have.
I think the key point is that evolution works very slowly... A typical timescale might be ~100,000 years. The timespan since the dawn of history, since the beginning of human civilization, is tiny in comparison. So we're essentially the same as Stone Age humans in genetic terms... We're still adapted to a tribal, hunter-gatherer lifestyle of a world very different than today's.Another point....evolution doesn't predict what will work today, but what worked years and years ago. We've undergone a tremendous cultural change in the ideas of what a father and mother are, and have seen an increase in adoption rates and the understanding that children do not have to be born to someone to be their children. Maybe this is leading to less of a push to pass on your genes and more of a push to pass on your values, your behaviors, and your actions---which are probably more cultural than they are genetic.
Your child shares half your genes, but your niece shares, what, about a quarter. So an adaption that causes you to sacrifice future children for a significantly larger number of future nieces will be worthwhile. Thus you get kin selection -- animals will often sacrifice themselves not only for their offspring but for close-enough relatives.Ahh don't be pedantic... and actually no. In terms of individual fitness it depends on your surviving to have children. Then it becomes a matter of the children, and whether they are fit, which of course depends on your childrens genes, which are usually a mix of the individual and the mate.
