Navigation

 BlackChampagne Home

In association with Amazon.comBuy Crap! I get 5%.
Direct donations to cover hosting expenses are also welcome.

Site Information
 
What is Black Champagne?
 
Cast of Characters/Things
 Your First Time
 Design Notes
 Quote of the Day Archive
 Phrase of the Moment Archive
 Site Feedback
 Contact/Copyright Info

Blog Archives
 • Blogger Archives: June 2005-present
 • Old Archives: Jan 2002-May 2005

Reviews Section
Movie Reviews (153)

Ten Most Recent Film Reviews:
  • Infernal Affairs -- 5.5
  • The Protector -- 6
  • The Limey -- 8
  • The Descent -- 6
  • Oldboy -- 9.5
  • Shaolin Deadly Kicks -- 7
  • Mission Impossible III -- 7.5
  • Chase Step by Step -- 7.5
  • V is for Vendetta -- 8.5
  • Ghost in the Shell 2 -- 6
  • Night Watch -- 7.5
Book Reviews (76)
Five Most Recent Book Reviews:
 • Cat People, by Michael Korda -- 4
 • Attack Poodles, by James Wolcott -- 5
 • Caught Stealing, by Charlie Huston -- 6
 • The Dirt, by Motley Crue -- 7.5
 • Harry Potter #6 -- 7

Photos and Captions
 • Flux Photos
 • Pet Photos (7 pages)
 • Home Decor Photos
 • Plant Photos
 • Vacation Photos (21 pages)

Articles Section
See all 234 Articles

Fiction
Original fantasy and horror short stories.

Mail Bags
 Index Page

Features
 
Links
 Slang: Internet
 Slang: Dirty
 Slang: Wankisms
 Slang: Sex Acts
 Slang: Fulldeckisms
 Hot or Not?
 Truths in Advertising

Band Name Ratings
(350 Rock Bands Listed)
FAQFeedback
A • BC • D • E
FGHIJ • K
LMNOP
Q • RSTU
V • W • XY • Z

Diablo II
 • The Unofficial Site
 • Flux's Decahedron
 • Middle Earth Mod

 

 

Thursday February 21, 2002
Quote of the Day
Civilized people--Muslims, Christians and Jews--all understand that the source of freedom and human dignity is the Creator. Civilized people of all religious faiths are called to the defense of His creation. We are a nation called to defend freedom--a freedom that is not the grant of any government or document, but is our endowment from God. -- John Ashcroft, Attorney General of the United States

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. -- First Amendment to the US Constitution

Daily Rambling
Okay, so someone might actually be seeing this at this point, since I can see the site in my browser.  Which means I'd better get the last few pages that aren't in the proper format done and uploaded, get the navigation fixed, etc. etc.  If you are seeing this and there are broken links and some pages looking odd, excuse the mess, it'll all be better later this week.

Also, if you are reading this (other than in the archives months later) I would appreciate if you let me know how you happened upon my site, since I've not looked for linkage from anything, not submitted to search engines yet, etc.  Since I'm not showing up with even a direct search on google right now, I think the coast is clear.

It's been a relatively uneventful day.  Rode my bike up and down the canyon trails some, so at least got out and got some exercise.  Must keep my slim, girlish figure, right?  Of course the last one I kept locked up in a closet for a month and had to flee the country when she escaped, but let's not get into that.

Here's another thingie from the ideas page, since I'm doing 10 other site pages now and don't have time to do a big clever blog, even if I had an idea of what to do one on.  Here's a long one I wrote a couple of weeks ago, and yes, the topic is more interesting than my handling of it.

An interesting article I read recently has a number of scientists debating whether or not human evolution has stopped.  The article doesn't really go into much depth about it, but I will.

First off, I'm not even going to entertain the concept of non-evolution.  No one with a modicum of scientific knowledge believes that for an instant, unless they have so much religious indoctrination that they can't overcome it to see reality, in which case they are to be pitied, and hopefully kept away from children.

If you know better, but still need to believe in whatever organized superstition you were raised with so badly that you cling to it, while trying to work in scientific reality, and have some mixture of ideas, you can continue reading.  Like you realize the absurdity of the Adam and Eve myth, but think that God made the earth and set evolution in motion, or whatever, you can also continue reading, since you're intelligent enough to grasp the finer points of the arguments.  If you think the earth is 8000 years old and Noah's Ark is really up on some mountain somewhere, and dinosaur fossils were put in the ground by God to fool heathen scientists, you might as well just skip the rest, since it'll all go way over your head.

So has evolution stopped?  

it's certainly possible, since as the article points out, much of natural selection has been ended, with so little early death (compared to the good old days), and also especially monogamy, and societal reasons for it. In animals, the dominant male might be the father of 50% of the young, since he'll claim as many females as he possibly can, by violence, if necessary.  For humans that happens a little bit, perhaps more in some of the more "backwards" cultures like Arabia, with multiple wives, and god knows what's going on with "savages", people living in mud huts and praying to rocks and such in various 3rd world portions of the globe, but it's not a common thing.  Humans are almost never truly monogamous (we like to fuck around on the side too much), but even with rock stars and athletes and other males that score aplenty, they don't tend to have *that* many children.

The article doesn't really address that at all, it's clearly very western-world-centric, talking mostly about evolutionary selective factors in modern, western culture.  The article doesn't really go in depth enough to be of much value, and it's clearly not by a scientist, as it's just a quick overview of various quotes, with no real insightfulness.  

One could argue that in our western world we're actually going backwards.  Who has the most kids?  Usually poor people, who can't afford to give them the best care/education/etc.  Hard to discuss that w/o sounding like a white supremacist though, raving about the black or brown menace.  After all, plenty of white trash women get knocked up at the drop of a welfare check, right? ;)

More seriously, the dominant factor in human success now is technology and intelligence.  These, along with a minority (pun intended) who succeed financially through athletic ability.  However this doesn't often translate to the old fashioned evolutionary gain, which was achieved through sheer numbers.

In other words, in the old days of humans, and currently in most animals, the male with the best attributes of choice (generally strength, speed, size, etc in animals) gets to breed the most, and has the most offspring, thus passing on the most of his genes, and therefore having the most effect on the future generations.  Weaker, smaller males don't get to breed much, if at all.  Therefore the tendency is generally for animals to grow ever faster, stronger, sleeker, and perhaps somewhat more intelligent, or at least to weed out the really stupid, since they'd not be clever enough to catch their own food or stay away from predators.

That's an oversimplification, since it ignores animals that are monogamous, others that have a social structure that might support weaker or dumber animals, species where females have more choice in who they mate with, but you get the picture.

In humans now the physically strongest don't necessarily get any special success.  How many ex-football stars in high school and college are working in gas stations, or coaching P.E., or in jail, etc.  Compared to that, weaker or smaller males often spend more time with their studies, and end up with much better educations and better jobs, and more money.  And individuals with both, physical strength and intelligence, are often the most successful, beating the slightly stronger but dumber males in sports, using their physical skills and good looks and confidence to beat the slightly smarter nerds in getting jobs or leadership roles.

But none of this necessarily translates into more offspring, or even offspring at all.  As I said a few paragraphs up, who has the most kids generally?  Poor people, where they have less intelligence to use birth control, more free time, less to occupy themselves with other than sitting around and watching TV and fucking, and more miserable lives, where they need to find some joy and often turn to drugs, drink, sex, etc.

However education and culture eradicates much of this, since even very poor children survive thanks to free food and medicine, and can often work their way up with education to be as or more successful than more fortunate kids. Humans today (in Western culture) are much more fluent in technology, more mobile, have better standards of living, and would likely appear much more intelligent than their great grandparents.  However they have identical genes.  Check back in 200 years, will everyone learn computer programming and interfacing in pre-school?  Will everyone know how to plot star coordinates to fly their ship across the Milky Way?  Will almost no one have any idea how to plant a field, or fix an engine, or make a fire, since we've got machines to do all of that?  There's no way to say.

This is all basically off topic though, since evolution isn't change in an existing organism.  It's change over generations, caused by environmental stresses, usually.  And social support in society more or less short circuits that, since the weak don't die off any more than the strong have more offspring.  Humans of today are generally physically larger than those of 100 years ago, but that's not evolution, our genes haven't changed, that's just due to better nutrition in childhood allowing for more complete growth.  We also live much longer, but that's due to better nutrition, medical care, etc.  In countries with terrible economies, disease, hard working conditions, people die live 15 or 20 years less, on average.

Also arguments about whether there's still going to be human evolution or not are generally quite short sighted.  Humans have changed an incredible amount over the last 20 or 50,000 years.  Especially compared to other animals.  Since the time of the dinosaurs, 150 million years or more, sharks (and many other types of fish) have been basically the same as they are now, since the oceans are much less changing than the land, and they are perfectly-adapted to their environment now.

So has human evolution come to a stop?  It seems like a yes, at a glance, since we've totally circumvented natural selection with technology, and our mating and breeding patterns are so anti-evolutionary on top of that.  However I (and the authors of that article linked to at the top of the page) are concentrating almost entirely on western civilization, and in any event, our window of observation is so short.  Humans have long generations, and far fewer offspring than most other species, so any evolutionary changes that do come about will take forever to spread widely.

Also our genetics are such a small portion of our adult package.  Animals don't learn much, (for the most part) they don't gain culture, they are just instinctual machines, perhaps learning some better techniques for catching prey, or avoiding predators, but nothing like the life time learning curve that humans go through. You could clone the same animal 10x and all 10 of them would likely grow up to have virtually identical lives and experiences, and the most successful of them would have the most offspring. If you did the same with a human, the 10 of them (assuming for this example they weren't living together and aware of each other) would probably grow up to live very different lives, with some much more successful than the others, but their "success" in life, which we generally measure in financial aspects, doesn't necessarily correlate to their "success" in passing on their genes.  As discussed above, one of the 10 could be a garbage man and have 3 wives and 9 kids over his life, while 3 others could become college professors and have 1 kid between them.

Basically the whole topic is very interesting, but almost impossible to quantify or even qualify, to get a definitive answer.  Check back in 2000 years and see how people are, compared to how they are now?

<-- Previous -- Daily Main Page --Next -->

 

All site content copyright "Flux" (Eric Bruce), 2002-2007.