Is the birth canal the limit to human evolution?
Grafwritah
4,184 Posts
In *The Universe In a Nutshell* by Stephen Hawking, he advances the theory that humans are limited in regards to intellectual evolution because only a certain size brain will fit through the birth canal, and humans already have a hard enough time squeezing those watermelon headed babies out as it is.What are your thoughts?
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However, I think that humans will become smart enough to bypass natural evolution and we'll be on some gattaca shit having tube babies and the whole reproductive system will be pointless
Ill take it one step further though,...
I plan on *forcing* my future wife to have a c-section - I dont want my kids soft, malleable skull being squeezed through an opening 1/8 of its size. I was a C-section baby myself, and I attribute my C+ GPA almost entirely to this fact. I shudder to think what my report card would have looked like had my puny brain been strained through tight-fitting meat curtains on day one, YaoMizzle?
you could say that another is that we are not equipped with wings and sonar navigation. or we can't run 40 mph like some cats can...
really, our brains are already supersized... 3 times bigger than a generic monkey or ape of our body size. if our bodies reflected the size of our brains, we'd be 10 feet tall. because of this, the brain takes up an extraordinary amount of energy (blood flow)... supposing the birth canal were a bit larger and our skulls could fit larger brains, there would definitely be a compromise from another part of our already weak (in great ape terms) bodies. one of the negative effects of having such a powerful and explosive brain is the rest of our body suffers.
the moral of the story is we are perfect just the way we are... we have our little niche of inventing technologies to help us fend off - and now dominate - the rest of the animal kingdom, and for that, we miss out on the niches like copulating with flowers, having fangs, navigating in darkness, and so on.
Apparently you dont spend your nights perusing the same websites that i do....
oh yeah, you like that don't you, you naughty little honey sucker
So in that sense we would have to "bypass natural evolution."
But we pretty much have already done this. I mean the deaf-born or even color-blind (if due to an inheritable trait) shouldn't be as prominent in our population if it were truly up to 'natural' selection.
But we'll all have wireless, external harddrive, cyber brains in not too long so keep squeezing em out!
from stephen hawking and evolution to flower sex to porn... we should be ashamed
get back on track!
It's too early in the morning for me to get too deep into this, but there are a lot of theories out there that in fact human babies born via C-section are less-equipped at a young age because they do not recieve the same huge shot of chemicals from Momma at birth. Not necessarily ill-equipped, but it's the same reason some people opt for drugless, "natural" births. Who knows if it's true. I tend to believe that millions of years of organic evolution can't be wrong, but I also have to claim that I have a somewhat tendentious distrust of pharmaceutical companies and the medical industry in general.
I've never read stats, don't know if they even exist, but it's something to think about perhaps.
of course Hawking has a point, but our species has evolved other strategies to bypass, to some extent, this limitation. Specifically, this is why, as someone else said above, human babies, relative to other species, are so helpless. More of our post-natal development is devoted to brain growth, which occurs at some ridiculous rate after birth. So the limitation of the size of the birth canal is compensated for by [evolutionary] adjustment in our ontogeny.
Yeah, Stephen Jay Gould (I think) makes this point in one of his books - compared to many animals, human babies are exceptionally helpless, for a really long time after birth, and it may be because the brain development that would usually happen in the womb happens outside of it.
I was thinking the same thing.
Good thread btw.
Actually these days, in the West at least, the figure for c-section births is more like 1 in 10
Thank you.
And as far as that business about "If only we'd use more of our brain we could fly or move things with our minds" or however you want to phrase it, that shit is bunk.
The idea that we've got a big mass of brain that's just sitting dormant waiting for us to tap into it is untrue. Whether we're maximizing our mental capacity is a slightly different question, but your whole physical brain is active (sometimes) and serves a function. There's certainly redundancy such that brain damage or inactivation at a local level can be compensated for but there's no secret "genius" section of the brain that's just waiting for us to switch it on.
No kidding this is stephen hawking on the mic! A must must see!
I could go crazy with the greamlins but decided against. Peace.
the wonder canal doesn't limit the evolution of our species but throughout the ages, it has created a limit on the size of our skulls. and while "intelligence" and the size/density of one's brain and skull are not related on any 1:1 scale, there is a correlation between the functioning capability of the mind and the size of the brain. for example, amongst the animal kingdom, primates developed a spectacular ability for sight. this is reflected in our "enlarged" and complex visual cortex. at the same time, our sense of smell is shite compared to many other species so the area of the brain that processes olfactory sensations is compartitively small.
also, please note that our brains develop greatly both before and after birth.
on a somewhat different note, this...
is very true
ps - spelling phallacy like fallicy is a phallacy
Actually....
Main Entry: fal??la??cy [/b]
Pronunciation: 'fa-l&-sE
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural -cies
Etymology: Latin fallacia, from fallac-, fallax deceitful, from fallere to deceive
1 a obsolete : GUILE, TRICKERY b : deceptive appearance : DECEPTION
2 a : a false or mistaken idea b : erroneous character : ERRONEOUSNESS
3 : an often plausible argument using false or invalid inference
...spelling
I understand consciousness and thus intellectual capabilities to be like the foam on a wave. The wave moves the way it does due to the physical rules that guide it. It takes the whole wave to produce the little bit of foam on top. The idea that mind can animate matter is at best wishful thinking. Hawking is right, I believe, in asserting that our intellectual capabilities are limited due to our brain size. However, the atoms that make up our brains are part of the grander universe, with electrons tunnelling from distant quasars faster than the flash. So we do have the capability to be like Buddha, and be one with the universe.
We humans will not be the last life form to inhabit this planet.
no doubt, that gattaca shit is some phallusy.
in other news:
i'd tap
yeah, this is basically an old-wives tale.
pretty much every part of your brain is being used at any given point, to what degree just depends on the task at hand.
i'm not sure where this myth of "we only use 10% of our brain" comes from, but it's entirely false.