Well, I hope you’re right! You have some very worthy points. We could get in to Darwinism, but that’s a rabbit hole I think neither of us has the time for - and I don’t disagree with all aspects of Darwinism. If anything, I think Darwin’s paradigm was guilty of lacking information, which is entirely fair, given the fact that he had none to go off of. To be fair, Darwin is the kind of man I have an immense amount of respect and appreciation for. If Darwin was alive today, I think he would have revised his own theory probably 5 or 10 times by now. Unfortunately, he died, and his brain died with him. The man was, in my mind, everything a scientist should be.He was a student of the world.
One of the BEST things that Darwin gave us, in my mind, is the perspective that we did, actually, evolve. I don’t think any reasonable person can dispute this. It is one of those incredible theories that has become, essentially, a fact.
So, I hope you don’t think that I have contempt for Charles Darwin. That’s absolutely not the case. It’s frankly astounding that our species produced this man! (Here I would dearly love to make a playful tongue face, but I know it will be conquered by a creepy green...thing...And I have yet to figure out how to disable this breed of emoji imposters)
We could argue the validity of some of the points of Darwinism, but good lord, I don’t think either of us signed up for that when we started this conversation. Instead, I’ll just make one point as to how I think we misuse the theory today.
We have a tendency to believe that genetic alterations happen because they benefited us as a species. What we’ve learned in the field of genetics seems to contradict this, to a degree.
The genetics responsible for our evolution were most likely random, chance mutations*, which proved to not be adversarial to our survival, so they ended up proliferating.
( * this information is based on knowledge I gleaned in conversations with two people educated in genetics. Not from studies I personally read)
Many people today, however, still treat evolution as though we brought it about by selecting the traits we felt were best. A lot of that can manifest in Evolutionary Biology. we have a habit of thinking that we evolved traits for a reason. That probably wasn’t the case. We probably evolved traits as a consequence of happenstance, and since they weren’t disadvantageous, they didn’t get bred our. That’s very different from thinking : We evolved to stand upright because of X.
This, though, is also a massively long discussion. You and I keep dancing around the edges of one of those, don’t we? Lol.
I appreciate your olive branch! Sorry I’m not playing the game properly with pretty quotes - no internet, and my phone doesn’t cooperate all that well with this forum.
In any case, I’m glad that you can see, in part, where I’m coming from...and I really hope that it won’t carry on to the next generation. Maybe this is just a consequence of the millennial arrogance? Perhaps generation Z will be more reasonable. I think they will be, in fact, so I’m predisposed to agree with you here...I’d still like to interview this high schooler that we have, though, about his peers, and see if I can figure out Generation Z’s tendencies. So far, my research suggests that they seem very pragmatic and practical. I’m excited. I hope they will usher in a new age of scientific respectability.
Maybe I can get overly pessimistic regarding this topic? I would like to think I’m analyzing it without bias, but I’m not stupid enough to think that could be the case. It’s a very good point that the apparent idiocy I’ve observed in some of our scientists may not carry on to the next generation. I hope that’s the case.
This has been a great discussion. :3
(Must is the cat-like smile lest I get invaded by little green men)
Oh! Also...I don’t think the people I’ve talked to are necessarily stupid. I think they’re motivated by natural tendencies that are genuinely good. We should defend what we believe in. I just think that when it comes to scientific theory, people have a tendency to take it too personally.
Joe Rogan, for instance. Have you ever heard of him? He’s a YouTuber and he’s fairly popular. He had a video which featured the host of the show Adam Ruins Everything, and it was very poorly conducted. At any rate, in the course of his Adam-bashing (his fans apparently hate this host, so it was a highly marketable opportunity), he made the rather pitiful argument that “Women are attracted to tall, muscular men” because that’s what we evolved to look for in a mate, and anyone who says otherwise is kidding themselves. He used the same bandwagon kind of reasoning to validate his stance on “alpha” and “beta” males.
Now, to be clear, I do think that women are choosey about mates and I do think that males struggle for dominance. I also think that most peoples’ interpretations of how these aspects manifest is crude, at best, and bullshit at worst. Excuse my French. (Maybe that’s not a good expression to use on a multicultural forum though)
What bothers me about this attitude is the fundamental belief of society that males demonstrate a wolf-pack dominance, and that the biggest, strongest males are the best breeding candidates, and whoever doesn’t agree with this concept is an absolute moron and science-denyer. This is one of those situations where if you dare comment to the contrary, you will get set upon.
Obviously, there’s many situations like that, and more credible ones than a YouTuber example...but the fact that the community is so aggressive about concepts such as this - well, it’s an issue. It causes a lot of problems, and inspires a lot of unnecessary studies and research because of public appeal. It’s one example of how scientific arrogance is a cultural issue.