English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

What will we evolve to in the future?

2006-10-24 20:24:10 · 18 answers · asked by Dreamer 1 in Social Science Anthropology

18 answers

I think we may have passed it, and we are on our way down. The earth is overpopulated and technology has made it so being fit is not really a factor in survival. The human race will decline until we get to a place where the race is challenged to survive.

2006-10-24 20:33:22 · answer #1 · answered by the guru 4 · 1 1

No. Evolution is not progressive. We and all other species are under constant genetic selection which has tended to make organisms become more complex. There is really not a way to make an absolute assessment of 'best' or 'peak'.

If due to some bizarre future 'environmental' changes, only humans who had a genetically-based phobia of light could survive and therefore humans spent most of their time underground, would that be considered a step up toward a peak or a step down from a peak? If humans became resistant to HIV/AIDS due to a massive die-off of those sensitive to it, would that reflect a step up toward a peak or a step down.

The only way that one might usefully use the word peak in the evolution of anything is if they become extinct. Then, in one way but not in all ways, the species reached its peak.

It's fair to say that we have little idea of what we'll evolve to in the future but I'd suggest the following as traits that might be found in humans in 10,000 years (if we are still around). More radiation-tolerant, more diverse genetically (due to global migrations of these last few centuries), less diverse genetically (due to bottlenecks and massive die-offs), more efficient metabolically (due to shortage of food), resistant to some diseases that we are not now resistant to, and even more prone to religiosity than we are now.

2006-10-25 09:29:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Evolution has no peak. Humans are continuing to evolve. Physical environment will have less influence. Sexual selection will have a disproportionately larger influence, more so do to females in developed countries. Due to sexual selection, the human race will become taller. Tall men and wealthy men will father a disproportionately larger share of the population. Technological advances will reduce competition for basic needs resources. Women will be less financially dependent on men. Males of short stature and low wealth will contribute disproportionately less to the gene pool.

2006-10-27 05:01:08 · answer #3 · answered by garfielddean1 2 · 0 0

We are not even close to the peak of evolution. As it becomes easier for information to be gathered into central points ( like the internet) those who obsorb it faster will make more money, they will have more kids that survive to adulthood. These kids will have kids who obsorb information faster, becuase of this they will have good jobs......

It has been documented that children are learning at rates several times faster then their parents. If a good form of teaching these kids is developed then it is very likely that humans will evolve in a such a way that an IQ of 300 is considered a dummy. I think humans will reach such high levels in about 200 years.

Hails,
Silence

2006-10-24 20:36:46 · answer #4 · answered by Silent One 4 · 0 1

All existence continuously evolves and adapts, inclusive of us. If it doesn't , then that is going to change into extinct. With a climate it really is replacing more effective straight away than at any time in heritage, we can ought to adapt subsequently. obviously, our clinical and technological advances will be of serious guidance in our destiny survival. the important challenge i visit confirm for the destiny is the hovering inhabitants of the planet, and the lengthy run result this would have. the glaring challenge is feeding all of them, yet we also might want to ought to think about the position they'll all stay. it really is through the actual shown actuality that there are fewer inhabitable places left that organic failures take this kind of toll of human existence, as everyone is forced to inhabit flood plains, volcanically lively section and so on. There are in basic terms too many human beings! Any ecosystem can in basic terms help a particular inhabitants. go previous that severe volume and nature will commence exerting its own controls. we are starting up to confirm indicators of this now.

2016-12-05 05:12:36 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Actually we are not at our peak, but in a decline. People in general are becoming less evolved rather than more evolved. It is the decline of civilization as we know it.

2006-10-25 14:40:41 · answer #6 · answered by Jo 3 · 0 0

there is no "peak" in human evolution, but i can say with some certainty that our evolution has just about stopped.

evolution relies on survival of the fittest. Since we have technology, medicine and whatnot, theres no "survival of the fittest", because helping the least benefited is moral.

2006-10-24 22:12:31 · answer #7 · answered by Roka 2 · 0 0

You don't peak in evolution. Evolution is about adapting to your environment. Evolution is about change according to needs. If you are talking about our brain development, and if prior studies are right; we are only using 10% of our brain's potential. In other words we have a lot of room to develop.

Any other changes that would be physical will not happen unless it is needed for the survival of the species, and if it can happen fast enough. For example, the change in environment has to happen slow enough for us to adapt. If it is too quickly, we will just become extinct.

2006-10-24 21:18:56 · answer #8 · answered by jasonheavilin 3 · 1 1

The rate we're going, we've past the peak. According to scientists in a yahoo article I read today, at our current rate, earths natural resources are supposedly gonna be gone by 2050! Now the question is, how accurate is that statement? If it is accurate, we're already screwed.

2006-10-24 20:34:56 · answer #9 · answered by big_j_gizzy 4 · 1 1

Your asking of this question only exposes your ignorance of evolution. Evolution does not " peak ".

2006-10-25 10:09:09 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers