by Doram » December 13th, 2013, 4:31 am
Ack! Sorry!!! Life got way too busy for a bit there... (Ouch! Two months! Sorrysorrysorry!!!!)
Considering that this is breaking off from Arayen's discussion, I would like to set that aspect of this aside for the time being, and discuss some philosophical underpinnings first. Once this is out of the way, I am more than willing to get back to what this means for that. Also, I will address a few other things at that time. Also sorry this took so long. I also wanted to give this proper attention (like the following week of massaging this for logic, flow, and making sure it represents my philosophy properly - maybe I am taking too long...)(Umm, at two months, I think I can call this too long...).
Now. Taking a step back from the socio-political and historical aspects of the conversation for a moment, let's consider the human nature side of the discussion - first the ideal of the correct perspective, and then the flaws of the current situation. Evolution, as a biological imperative, is driven by well documented patterns, derived both by a species' ability to thrive in existing situations as well as adapt to new situations. These drives manifest in a desire, and efforts to enact such desire, to preserve and encourage the thriving growth of a population in a stable environment, and to find new ways to survive in a changing environment (with a related secondary drive to create and maintain stability).
Extrapolated into a systemic description of the effect, however, it becomes clear that evolution as an ontology is automatically self destructive. Which came first? The chicken or the egg? The correct answer, from this perspective, is the egg, since what laid the egg WAS NOT a chicken, and due to the necessary genetic mutation, what hatched from the egg WAS a chicken. Striving for human evolution while worrying about if the result will still be human is a logical fallacy, since by definition, the evolved creature must not be human to be considered to have evolved.
This being said, the sentiment behind your objection does have merit. What is it that we consider uniquely defines us as human that is valuable enough to preserve in the next biological iteration, while allowing less important factors to change? If we were to consciously control the process, what would we consider a "positive" result to changing what it means to be human?
Well, let's start with where we are now. We humans have a unique place in nature in that we have evolved beyond most natural limits to our growth. We can adapt to just about every type of environment on the face of the Earth with our technology. We are technically apex predators in every food chain. The only things that can bring us down at all is disease and corruption (corruption mentioned here in a VERY broad sense), and technically disease is usually conquered in time as well. As a result of the interaction with the natural world being removed as driving forces of evolution for humans, what is left? Well, what is left is what we have in our environment that is not strictly controlled - each other. Our current evolutionary pressures are stress at work, finding an acceptable mate, paying our bills, dealing with our parents, dealing with our children - ultimately dealing with life on every level that we apply our abilities to: emotional, mental, and physical. THESE are our current evolutionary pressures, and they are already changing us. Autism is, from this perspective, a biological response to generations of neglect and abuse. It is the mental version of a flight response (as versus fight) stuck on. Similarly, ADD is a biological response to the desire to do more and do more at once. (I could go further with this train of thought, but in some ways it descends into the abhorrently offensive, as they are the kinds of justifications the ignorant have used for persecution, ignoring the more pressing philosophical meaning we discuss currently.) And in a semi-conscious way, we are also evolving in response to our evolutions - modern medicine trying to heal the disabled, for example. We are already evolving, and we are evolving in response to the only pressure great enough to affect us - each other.
Taking a step back from the reality of the situation this presents us with, we must ask ourselves a question. If we are the ones doing this to ourselves, and indeed the only force in this world capable of doing so, then should this not be something that SHOULD be done consciously and responsibly? Are we not abdicating our genetic evolutionary responsibility by not making personal evolution a conscious personal choice? If our nature as living beings, even absent any concept of divinity, demands a constant battle for evolution, then are we not denying ourselves our rightful place on the Earth by NOT trying to evolve? We therefore have a responsibility to honor all the evolution that got us here by using every tool that evolution gave us to advance the cause of evolution - including our consciousness.
And so the question of a conscious and intentional search for evolution then turns to what to change. What is unique? What is valuable? What serves? What is it that we are, that we want to hold on to? What is it that is not working any more that needs to be let go? Well, as most studies of human culture and psychology divide the human experience into the emotional, the physical, and the mental, let's take them one at a time.
One can certainly posit that the nobler side of the emotions illustrates a picture of what is valuable to the human world. Love, happiness, altruism, and cooperation are all considered better than hatred, anger, aggression, and abuse, right? But who loves life more than those who have been near death? Who appreciates happiness more than those who have known abuse and loss? What of righteous fury and fighting for what you believe in? One might as well ask what is light without the dark. Besides which, emotions cannot be controlled directly (without manipulation, which is inherently negative...). No. Emotions cannot be where we draw the line. Unless we abandon the concept of emotion entirely, we cannot choose any one emotion as vital over any other. Though it does serve as a defining characteristic of humanity, the emotional realm needs be left sacrosanct else it ceases to function properly at all, and therefore is not something that should be considered for evolutionary culling of any sort.
Then physical. Doing something. Not doing anything. Is one better than the other? No. Each has its uses. Then doing what? That is so huge a concept as to be beyond the scope of the current discussion. Deciding what to do, that requires... I think we're looking at the wrong end of the equation in this case. That leaves...
Mental. Now this has some potential. As a defining characteristic, the intellectual task of curiosity is something that has defined us even before we became human, as our primate ancestors/cousins continue to demonstrate. Furthermore, the concept of self-awareness is often cited as a major defining characteristic of our species. So, with the mental realm identified as possibly evolution's most potent and obvious gift, let us consider it as a primary tool of our continuing evolution.
Now, what changes to our mental state, and indeed what mental states in general, would be beneficial for the processes of evolution? Evolution as a reaction to the environment requires one to be aware of the environment, so attentiveness becomes a key state. Making choices about what physical actions to undertake to ensure survival is also part of the process, so being both physically active and actively mentally engaged are also key; let's call that involved. Analyzing the possibilities in order to make said choices requires examining all factors and following the situational logic to whatever conclusion best fits, which could technically come from anywhere, so let's add open-minded to the list (I'm passing over logical for that one, since pure logic excludes the talent of intuition from the argument, and being logical is also a factor that varies per individual according to their talents - IQ and otherwise).
So, the ideal response to the challenge of evolution is remaining attentive, active, engaged, and open-minded. All these are hallmarks of excellent scientists, which to a certain extent exemplify the pinnacle of humanity in the arena of maximizing human potential in this day and age, in the mind of the public at large. I posit that this ideal is a pattern that serves well in many more arenas of life than just the laboratory, but we can come back to this later. Now, let us turn to the flaws of the current situation.
Humanity, from a human nature perspective, is currently on auto pilot in many ways, not to mention seemingly caught in a nasty downward spiral. We are distracted by our technology, focusing on things with the randomness of the average commercial break. We seek to be entertained with minimal control over the content of the entertainment, and when not being entertained, we seek blind oblivion and escape. The tools of that escape take the form of drinking, drugs, addiction, and worse, and even when the activity is benign, it is taken to dangerous ends. People have died from playing too much video games. Really. We are so intent on ignoring the world in front of us that it is falling apart, and nobody seems to WANT to do anything to save it (much less know what to do...). With culture unconsciously stumbling on, pure frustration drives people to hunt each other in any of a bewildering variety of ways: backstabbing to climb the corporate ladder, swindling individuals or whole segments of the population out of their money through means both legal and illegal, manipulating the law and the government to suit their whims, much less the more obvious examples of prosecuted theft, murder, and fraud that make up the bulk of the recognized flaws of society. It is so overwhelming, in fact, that most tune it all out in an act of pure self-preservation. Clearly, this is a situation that is not sustainable in any way, and the more intelligent of us, whether cognizant or accepting of their intelligence or not, have a growing and nagging feeling that this is all going to culminate in something nasty and violent and unfortunately likely to be quite final for us and our planet...
And considering that this much has taken 2 months, the rest will have to wait.
Next up, what I believe that this means, what can be done about it, and how it affects more superficial concerns. At this point, you can certainly respond to what you see here. Also, I never had a problem with anybody adding to this in between my posts. Later considerations, grassroots movements, and also the long game...