The Problems of Evolution as a March of Progress – SAPIENS

Herschel Walker, the former football starturnedU.S. Senate candidate from Georgia, made headlines when he recently asked at a church-based campaign stop, if evolution is true, Why are there still apes?

This chestnut continues to be echoed by creationists, despite being definitively debunked. Anthropologists have repeatedly explained that modern humans did not evolve from apes; rather, both evolved from a shared ancestor that fossil and DNA evidence indicates lived 7 to 13 million years ago.

But Walkers question raises a larger, timely point that generally escapes recognition even by some scientists and educators.

A more fruitful query might be, If evolution is true, why are there still humans? Why is our species almost universally seen as the logical endpoint of evolution, with all other species serving as inferior detours or temporary placeholders on an inevitable march toward humanity?

This default, hard-to-shake view of evolution has been debunked as definitively as Walkers ape question. Yet it continues to be echoed in education, policy, business, conservation efforts, and the behaviors of the vast majority of people in Western, industrialized nations.

It is not necessarily surprising that non-scientists might see Earths history as a progression toward higher levels of complexity, with humans representing the most complex. What is startling is that traces of this view remain in scientific thought.

Biology teachers seldom realize it underlies lessons of four-chambered hearts succeeding over three-chambered hearts, or of simple urinary flame cells in flatworms and nephridia in earthworms next giving rise to kidney tubules in higher animals. As if humans are the benchmark by which all characteristics should be measured, and developing more human-like organs is a prime indicator of evolutionary advancement.

Worse, the progressive complexity view continues to infect anthropology. Its exemplified by the iconic March of Progressa linear sequence of slumped apes eventually supplanted by upright humans. And it persists in the ideas that certain lower ancestral human populations gave rise to, and were succeeded by, more complex people, who are often depicted as having lighter skin tones.

People must unlearn this idea that biological diversity is an ascending ladder of complexity, with humans on top and nonhuman species as imperfect transitions and lesser beings. The chief result of this misguided worldview is our casual disregard for the natural environment, whichvia climate change, habitat destruction, and biodiversity losscontinues to cause disastrous consequences for humans and nonhumans alike.

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The Problems of Evolution as a March of Progress - SAPIENS

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