The difference in my grandparents generation vs mine
Unless you’re Grandpa’s name is Methuselah I doubt he lived before agriculture became wide spread, and honestly I’d just assume he was a modern human with a weird name.
I had a family member get a knee replacement 20+ years ago - that was magical futurism in my grandparents generation. And the difference from then (weeks of rehab, crutches, etc), vs today when it’s typically outpatient surgery and you’re walking on it the same day
Right, that’s how evolution works…
Bad knees are a disadvantage, so the people with better connective tissue do better and have more kids.
But mate…
Take a look around and ask yourself how things are now with overpopulation.
Or the number of people not having strokes or heart attacks because of medicines to treat underlying conditions
I’d say not eating ultra processed food with insane levels of sugar and obesity rates that are frankly not possible pre-agriculture would also lessen risks. I wouldn’t be surprised if it was an overall benefit
Even cancer. It used to be something where you’d “fall ill” and die in a few months after even noticing. Now we live longer, sometimes even thru it. Thru immense pain and side effects, and even if we die our families go bankrupt paying for it
I’m saying there’s at least a good argument for why people have consistently second guesses if civilization has been a net positive since it became a thing.
Unless you’re Grandpa’s name is Methuselah I doubt he lived before agriculture became wide spread, and honestly I’d just assume he was a modern human with a weird name.
Right, that’s how evolution works…
Bad knees are a disadvantage, so the people with better connective tissue do better and have more kids.
But mate…
Take a look around and ask yourself how things are now with overpopulation.
I’d say not eating ultra processed food with insane levels of sugar and obesity rates that are frankly not possible pre-agriculture would also lessen risks. I wouldn’t be surprised if it was an overall benefit
Even cancer. It used to be something where you’d “fall ill” and die in a few months after even noticing. Now we live longer, sometimes even thru it. Thru immense pain and side effects, and even if we die our families go bankrupt paying for it
I’m saying there’s at least a good argument for why people have consistently second guesses if civilization has been a net positive since it became a thing.