Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Where did the Neanderthals go?

The disappearance of our closest relative, Homo neanderthalensis, is a mystery that will surely haunt scientific and popular literate for as long as the written words exists. The simple fact that we are the single survivors of a line of large-brained apes begs the question, where did they go? The most parsimonious explanation in the case of Homo sapiens versus Homo neanderthalensis is that the former outcompeted the latter. Competition is defined as an interaction between species that results in the fitness of one species being affected by the presence of another. This can be direct competition for resources, or indirect competition within a similar environment (Kersting et al., 2005). Many researchers cite the disparity between cultural capabilities seen in the two species. This is evidenced by a significant increase in cultural complexity and therefore cognitive function. This would have given Homo sapiens the edge they needed to displace Neandertals from their base in Europe. Before establishing which avenue the competition between these two species occurred in, a case for overlap must be made. The most frequently cited evidence for this type of competition is to be found in the Levant, and in France and the Iberian Peninsula.

The time frame in which this overlap occurred began as early as 135,000 to 100,000 years ago in the Near East Levantine corridor (Joris and Street, 2008). In this narrow corridor couched between the mountains and Mediterranean Sea, the population of the two species could never have been very large, perhaps reaching no more than 10,000 (Shea, 2003). In this area, two species with similar metabolic requirements would be in direct competition with one another if they lived in similar temporally and geographical locales (Shea, 2003). Many researchers have speculated on what this type of overlap would mean with such closely related species. Both species appear to have relied heavily on large animals during the Middle Paleolithic (Shea, 2003). Early modern humans disappear from the Levant between 130,000 and 80,000 years ago, supposedly being replaced by Neandertal populations who themselves disappear for the last time 50,000 to 45,000 years ago (Shea, 2003). This pattern could be the result of competitive displacement by each of the species as climates or technologies shifted in their favor. Some researchers point to the lack of cultural sophistication of early anatomically modern humans as the reason for this pattern, citing a heat adapted species literally being unable to expand beyond the territories of a cold adapted cousin. Many researchers agree that the cultural complexity of the two species was very similar prior to the time of AMH dispersing into Europe, but the time thereafter is hotly debated.

Despite the temporal proximity of the two species in the Levant, the real evidence for an increasing cultural gulf is to be found in Europe. Due to dating advances centered on the removal of “young” contaminates in bone and other cultural material made at Oxford University, it is now possible to tighten up the time-frame in which Homo sapiens moved into Europe, replacing the Neandertals. If this dating technique bears out, the shift from one species to the next occurred between 46,000 to 41,000 yr BP via calibrated carbon dates, a span of 5,000 years (Mellars, 2008). Indeed, even generous dates show that Neandertal fossils are found only before 38,000, while AMH are not dated to before 35,000 (Joris and Street, 2008). Because of this we look to cultural material characterized by the Aurignacian to determine the presence of one species over the other. In Southwestern France and the Iberian we have the greatest cause to believe there was contact due to the overlap of cultural materials (Mellars, 2006). The evidence here does not support a long coexistence of Neandertals and AMH (Mellars, 2006). In reality the cultural differences during the contact of the two species is void of substantial behavioral and cultural difference. Their subsistence strategies, lithics capability, burials, and ornamentations were nearly equal. It was not until after Neandertals had already disappeared that cultural complexity in Homo sapiens can be firmly established (Carnieri, 2004). Although this view is highly controversial, we could bear it in mind as we look towards other reasons for displacement.

The overall case for Neandertals being outcompeted is articulated by Richard Klein, who argues persuasively that behavioral modernity was the result of a brain mutation that allowed for Homo sapiens to view the world in a different way (D’Errico, 2003). The alternative sees the trajectory of complexity have deep temporal roots which are found in Africa some 250,000 years ago (D’Errico, 2003). Both scenarios reach fruition some 40,000 years ago with the second dispersal of AMH from Africa into Asia and Europe. The later of the two hypotheses explains the clear cultural complexity as a result of population density and basic subsistence needs acting upon the early human societies. An analogy is draw between Pleistocene Aboriginal Australians and Aurignacian people, which points out identical cognitive abilities that possessed different material culture and symbolism (Langley, et al. 2008). The argument here is that cultural complexity will manifest should the need arise, not simply because they are able. According to this later progressive model, “biological and behavioral modernity were inextricably linked, advancing together in a long and slow dialectic (d’Errico, 2003).” Evidence for a similar scenario is to be found in “transitional” Neanderthal tool industries that hint at a growing complexity of lithic material, such as the Chatelperronian (d’Errico, 2003).

The largest disparity between the pre-transitional assemblages of the Neanderthal and the industries of AMH is one of flake versus blade. If there was an advantage to be had between the two assemblages it would be found in cutting edge versus tool weight. Some researchers have quantified the gains of one over the other, claiming at most 5 or 10 times for blades over flake (Metin et al, 2008). The testable basis for these claims are that : “(1) blade technology produces more blanks, and thus (2) unit volume of tool-stone is more effectively and completely consumed and, most significantly, (3) vastly greater lengths of cutting edge per unit weight of tool-stone are produced (Metin et al., 2008).” When these claims were tested between the two tool types it was shown that “blades started out with 1.53 times more cutting edge than the flakes and 1.49 times more cutting edge per weight (Metin et al., 2008).” When the flakes and blades were sharpened to exhaustion they “accumulated 1.12 times more cutting edge than the blades and 1.15 more cutting-edge per weight of stone (Metin et al., 2008). Not only did this test disrupt the claims of cutting edge advantage, but it showed that ultimately flakes were a more economic use of such a precious resource. Further, the discoidal reduction was less risky to produce and that for every 100 grams of material consumed 1.22 more blanks than the blade cores were produced by flakes (Metin et al., 2008). Still, Homo sapiens would not have switched from one technology to the other without a reason. This reason can be seen in a shift in subsistence strategy, linked with anatomy.

If we look at the remains of Neanderthal skeletons we see evidence for a “draw near” hunting type which demands that they confront animals from a short distance, thereafter thrusting to kill the animal (Carnieri, 2004). It has been shown that thrusting was a source of strength asymmetry in both species in the Middle and Early Upper Paleolithic (d’Errico, 2003).This method was very dangerous but ultimately successful and was probably aided by the Neandertals well muscled frames. Regardless of this physical advantage, the points fashioned by Neandertals and Homo sapiens soon after this period reflect a difference in hunting types. In terms of aerodynamics, the Homo sapiens points were made to be “thin, straight, and light.” This indicates that Neandertals might have favored heavier weapons for closer hunting, while AMH preferred to throw their weapons. In the cold logic of Evolution, placing yourself in higher danger could reduce your fitness and thereafter allow for a species with a higher fitness ratio to increase their population gradually.

This pattern of subsistence and cultural shifts would only be augmented by a dietary disparity between Homo neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens. A reconstruction of Neanderthal caloric requirements done by Dr. Steven Churchill showed that 4500 to 5040 calories per day were required to maintain the bulk of their bodies (Science 307, 2005). The methods of using the La Ferrassie skeleton, traditionally living Inuit, and silicone to estimate mass surely has its faults, but the illustration is clear: If a modern Inuit can be used as a proxy for an AMH in an environment similar to a Neanderthal, they would require 3000 to 4000 calories per day. For a week the Neanderthal would require 31,500 calories, and a mixed band of 10 would require 315,000 on the low end. The Inuit needing 28,000 calories per week would require 280,000 on the high end for a band of 10. This results in a difference of 35,000 calories per week, which is more than enough calories for another Inuit (Science 307, 2005). Although these calculations are rough, the caloric requirement would be equivalent to one healthy caribou per month (Science 307, 2005). The stress of the lack of food is evident by the Harris lines and other dental indicators on the skeletons of many Neandertals.

When you couple the concept of a more demanding metabolic rate with the fact that meat composed a large portion of the Neanderthal diet, while the AMH diet is understood to be more varied (d’Erricho, 2003, Richards et al, 2008), it only enlarges the gulf between availability of calories to the two species, thus reducing the fitness of Neandertals even more. If one turns this line of thought solely upon the difficulties of remaining alive to reproductive age, it should be noted that recent models addressing the question of Neanderthal brain size show that their larger brains appear to be the result of more rapid growth rates during adolescence ( (de LeÃn, et al. 2008). This in itself would be more calorically demanding for adolescent Neandertals, especially if they required a higher percentage of protein as compared to their “human” cousins. And even when the females reached adult age, it would be harder for them to maintain a healthy enough state to maintain fertility due to stress reducing the frequency of their ovulation cycle (Science 307, 2005). Under such a light it is no wonder that later Neanderthal populations increased the breadth of their dietary resources by concentrating on smaller bodied animals and even moving onto marine resources (Stringer, 2008). Incidentally this later evidence comes from the site of Gibraltar which may have been a refuge population for Neandertals after a climatic event which exacerbated those issues which have already been discussed.

Although some researchers have claimed that Neandertals lacked the ability to adapt to “when the herds gave way to more thinly spread steppe animals and migrating groups that had to be followed (Holden, 2004).” It appears that a climatic event around 39,000 years ago occurred. This event, called the Heinreich 4, features a series of icebergs sliding into the North Atlantic and reducing sea and land temperatures around Europe (Mellars, 2006). This led to the deforestation and rise of desert like conditions in the Iberian Peninsula and Southern Europe (Joris and Street, 2008). The H4 coincides with the time-frame for the disappearance of the bulk of Neanderthal populations between 41,000 to 32,000 BP (Oxford “Ultrafiltration” calibrated dates) (Sepulchre, et al., 2007). This is the time which we see the Aurignacian culture dispersing into the North of the Iberian between 42,000 and 41,000 BP (Sepulchre et al., 2007). The argument being that this climatic event actually separated the two species is evidenced by Aurignacian cultural material appearing in the Southwest around 35,200 BP (Sepulchre et al., 2007). The refuge populations of the Neandertals could have been a result of climatic pressures coupled with an encroaching species. In fact it seems that the patterns of encroachment by AMH closely followed climatic events such as the improvement of conditions between 43,000–41,000 years ago (Mellars, 2006). Considering this it would seem appropriate that a harsh climate allowed the Neandertals to adjust their diet in order to compete more readily with the new threat. This is shown to be the case with evidence of exploitation of mollusks, fish, birds, and dolphins at Vanguard Cave, at Gibraltar and Moscerini Cave in Italy (Carnieri, 2004). In fact Gibraltar may have been one of the last refuge populations of Neandertals. Studies done in this area seem to buttress the idea that “Upper Paleolithic human levels of occupation in Gorham’s show behavior similar to that of Neandertals and similarly complex subsistence strategies that allowed them to exploit marine resources (Stringer et al., 2008).”

In essence what we are really discussing when we are talking about strategies such as these are the Neandertals’ ability to construct and maintain a niche that allows them to remain alive. Homo sapiens ability to construct a niche that a population can flourish in is also a central question to the topic of Neandertals disappearance. The concept of niche construction is used to frame this argument. Competition in this sense is when “a species ‘effects’ changes in the environment to which another species must ‘respond’ (Vandermeer, 2008).” If a species is dependent upon a population’s ability to gather food in groups, construct or maintain a shelter, gather fire-wood sufficient to remain warm during a climate shift, or simply address the needs of a pregnant mother, it goes without saying that this is requisite for survival. Both Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis were species that lived in bands which depended upon one another for survival. Should a band not have enough adult members to provide food for its dependants, the population must be reduced in order for other members to survive. The number of members required to maintain and construct a niche is inextricable linked to the amount of members that can be a part of the band. This concept is the dynamic of necessary and sustainable population (Vandermeer, 2008). This line of logic shows that a certain saturation will occur if a population grows to large in relation to its resources, not unlike the claim of Thomas Malthus. Similarly, should a population fall below that required to maintain a niche it will be forced into extinction or a lower level of niche production (Vandermeer, 2008). It is self evident that a pair of species with similar abilities and requirements would be in a precarious situation should both be pushed to a limit during a climatic shift. Something as narrow as the amount of calories required to maintain personal and reproductive health, the breadth of dietary sources, and the potential to support a higher population because of these facts, could make all the difference.

It is from this vantage that we can address the level of cultural complexity evident in the AMH versus the Neandertal record at the beginning of the paper. It has been proposed that an increase in regional concentrations of AMH was a catalyst for cultural complexity (McBearty and Brooks 2000, d’Errico 2003, Habgood, 2008, and Slimak, 2008, Shipman, 2008). This backdrop of population and cultural progression can be seen in a model developed by Borenstein et al., to explain cultural transmission through social networks. The keys to this model in relation to our question is that “…niche construction may generate selection pressures that lead to fixation of otherwise deleterious alleles, maintain genetic polymorphism where none is expected, eliminate what would otherwise be stable polymorphism, and produce time lags in the response to selection, as well as other unusual evolutionary dynamics (Borenstein, et al., 2006).” If we use this relation of networks, population size, and cultural innovation we can seem to flesh out an explanation for the symbolic behaviors used to gauge Klein’s modernity or cultural complexity. “Social networks, the vehicle of cultural evolution, are not static, but rather change over time, often owing to the evolutionary dynamics of other coevolving cultural traits (Borenstein, et al., 2006).” It should be noted that comparisons of cognitive expressions could be misguided due to the fact that AMH occupied multiple continents by 45,000 years bp (Langley, et al. 2008). This would provide a greater potential for social networks to develop, and cultural innovation which could more easily percolate. It goes without saying that the population size after the H4 is clearly in the favor of Homo sapiens even if the networks were not very large.

Competition between Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis is a series of complex events. The largest discrepancy is clearly shown by the cultural innovations of the two groups. Klein captured the question when he said: “the essential issue is cause and effect: whether population growth drove human behavioral change or behavioral change drove population growth (Habgood and Franklin, 2008).” The obvious implication is that cognitive differences led to being outcompeted. The list created to measure this excludes many contemporaneous and modern populations (Langley, et al. 2008). Indeed Australian Aborigines had little or no blade production until recent times (d’Errico, 2003). Furthermore, blade technologies do not appear to have intrinsic competitive value in regards to cutting ability as shown by Mertin et al. If we bring the concept of cultural complexity to the fore, we can mark an exponential increase in frequency through time at 20,000 year intervals starting at 150,000 years BP (Langley, et al. 2008). This would mark an independent incline of complexity that is no more “an ‘impossible coincidence’ than the multiple independent origins of agriculture (Langley, et al. 2008).” It is evident by ‘transitional’ assemblages that this incline was disrupted by events that are still unclear, (Slimak, 2008) but it may indicate that the last Neandertals could have been contemporaries early AMH (Joris and Street, 2008). Knowing this there does not seem to be a reason to invoke a cultural revolution to explain the disappearance of Neandertals.

To conclude, if Neandertals biological requirements were simply higher, their biology more inclined to a dangerous hunting style, and climatic events characterized by the H4 led to a bottleneck, it would seem evident that their fitness would be drastically reduced. Thereafter the Neanderthal population would be grossly inadequate when compared to anatomically modern Homo sapiens, and their pattern of cultural innovation would no longer be tenable. If we apply niche construction as a frame, we can see that a population can only be sustained if a certain amount of individuals are contributing to the procurement of sustenance and shelter. From here their reproduction would be directly impacted and the Neandertals would be unable to maintain the populations they once enjoyed. The reduced late refuge populations that exploited a greater variety of resources would not be enough to generate the cultural innovations nor the networks required to directly compete with the ever increasing AMH populations and, in the end, a series of events reduced the Neanderthal populations until extinction was assured. If the logic of this scenario holds, it would appear plausible that Homo sapiens outcompeted their cousins Homo neanderthalensis, not by a cognitive revolution, but by biological and climatic serendipity.

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Friday, December 26, 2008

The Course of Evolution?

Human evolution in the future will surely be an interesting experience. When handling such a question it is important that we are not Americentric. Because evolution takes place more prominently in centers of strong selection pressure, we must look towards this pattern for our answer. This does not exclude relatively stable western environments from the course of evolution, but it does make the projection less obvious. This becomes a question of dichotomous nature: Evolution acting upon those who are surrounded by security and resources, and those that are surrounded by a harsh environment filled with deleterious elements. In regards to this medicine is an especially striking issue. In less developed countries, pathogens and nutrition concerns are sometimes at a greater lack than in the evolutionary environment. In contrast to this modern medicine in developed countries allows people to reproduce that may not have within our evolutionary environment. Both issues are a direct result of the agricultural, industrial, and medical revolutions. Human biology is impacted by these advances in different ways but in reality the longevity beyond reproductive viability observed in developed nations has nothing to do with evolution. Medicine only impacts the population when it allows people to reproduce longer than they would have without it.  

The true crux comes down to mating strategies that are related to current environments. To stretch a poetic analogy over the evolutionary framework we can turn to Alfred Tennyson’s Ulysses. Although he surely did not mean to, he placed the pathways of our evolutionary course into the opening lines: “It little profits that an idle king; By this still hearth, among these barren crags, matched with an aged wife I mete and dole; Unequal laws unto a savage race; That hoard, and sleep, and feed, and known not me (Beaty et al. 2002).” Had Tennyson added the vulgar term rut to his list of barbaric actions, he might have had it all. When we consider the question of human evolution in the future we simply must find out what reproductive strategy is most successful at the moment. Tennyson answers this question in his own way. Ulysses, being a traveling hero, also says “I am part of all that I have met.” This would be the case with a in that he surely would leave behind many illegitimate children. To analogize further, traveling military men and modern businessmen are not exactly known for their fidelity. Alan Miller and Satoshi Kanazawa point out that our minds really function on a primitive scale. We are moved by those biological behaviors which were successful then. Women are attracted to mates of quality, and cuckholdry is always an option.  This was certainly the case then, before the modern advent of birth control, and is much the case now. This only highlights one portion of the poem; the savage race that Ulysses complained about surely has a place within evolution.  

Most people consider those of impoverished conditions to be the sector of the public prone to breeding uncontrollably. One must only look at the current western media for anecdotal support. Those portions of the population get heavy airtime on reality shows and talk shows like Jerry Springer. This is largely a fabrication of the media. In reality we must take into account that those with resources enough will be able to raise their children to reproductive age. Those without enough resources will not be able to. This is the level that evolution acts upon. Those that are truly in dire economic straits, such as Sub-Saharan Africa, have a total fertility rate that exceeds 6 live births within a woman’s reproductive years. In the United States the fertility rate sits a little above 2 (Rubenstein, 2008). Those that live to reproductive age in the environments to which they are born have their own suite of environmental pressures to deal with. In Sub-Saharan Africa their selection pressures result in an infant mortality rate ten times that of North America. It is not difficult to find a place for access to medicine at the center of this contrast.  

Medicine has been an influence to our species since its discovery. The ability to control the course of pathogens, prevent death, and improve overall health has helped bring about a population of titanic proportions. This is in line with the population increase observed after the agricultural and industrial revolutions. With an increased population comes an increase in the ability to sustain and promote greater genetic variation.  There are now genes being exchanged which would be considered “bad” in the evolutionary environment. Examples would be genes that render a person partially limbless or blood conditions like hemophilia. As Dr. Moalem points out, there are also genes that were potentially “good”, such as diabetes, but are now “bad” in our current environment. These genes have been allowed to persist because medicine can make them annoyances instead of fatal. Many people point to the idea that our gene pool is becoming diluted or even polluted by allowing such conditions to persist. This line of thought is certainly related to the eugenics movement of the early 20th century, and is just as fallacious.  

Many medical innovations on the horizon are currently aimed at eliminating such issues through gene therapy. This is not the course of our evolutionary future. Fischer’s fundamental theorem of natural selection sees the genetic homogeneity of this goal as a bad thing. This is because we are never sure what the environment of our future will be like. If someone with hemophilia also has the ability to stave off a super-virus or deal with rapidly changing environments tied to global warming, all the better. An increase in variation directly correlates to the health of the species. It follows that medicine should maintain the course of promoting or augmenting the health of an organism without damaging its ability to produce variation. This would be the course that provides an evolutionary future. It would seem the cultural trend of humans is that they become more tolerant of differences as they become more cosmopolitan. Therefore a shift from traditional aspects of variation would likely be the line of the next revolution. Not outside this concept is the shift from personal extension through prosthetics from trope to form.  

Prosthetics, once used to replace limbs, has found a new niche within technological culture. Although a fringe now, prosthetic extension is experimented with by those with no condition that would demand such objects. Medicine has made available an ability to augment natural ability through advances in this customized line of treatment. Although this is at the moment something entirely external, there are movements towards biological incorporation (Smith and Morra, 2006). In the field of study concerned with nanotechnology, interest in internalizing power supplies via modified eel electrocytes has produced significant results (Xu and Lavan, 2008). This method of energy production would work directly through the metabolic system, and could be used to power machines thereafter. With very little imagination one can instantly see the medical leaps we could make if only we could power the cumbersome mechanisms we have invented to handle heart conditions, breathing issues, and digital pain suppressors (Albert et. al. 2006). This incorporation of borrowed cells into our own bodies to augment ourselves would become a biological reality that could have implications on the scale of modern evolution.  

This projection only becomes clear if we synthesize select patterns present in the more developed countries. High obesity rates, the desire for symbolic internal and external modification, the presence of a technocentric elite, and the new ability to internally power digital apparatus, we might see the culmination of the computer age. People who were once obese would now have the extra calories needed to power their internal devices via electrocytes within the body. This ability could render the individuals willing to engage in this path more influential. If the behavior that allows for the decision to engage in risk of such an extreme modification is under genetic control as well as the trait of obesity than selection could be present. Of course this would only be true if there was an advantage.  

Indeed, within our current culture there are many of the most recent generation that would leap at the chance to merge with their iPhone. This idea spurs both disgust and fascination. The ability to track your position on the planet via the installed GPS makes you more punctual, or constant access to newsfeeds makes you more efficient in the office, cultural selection would be present. To push the concept further, advances could one day reach the level of direct cognitive enhancement which would certainly give an edge analogous to a beneficial mutation. Furthermore, real-time health monitor into this system would increase lifespan and possibly alert people to emergency conditions before they occur. This, much like previously mentioned revolutions would help to increase genetic variation within the species.  

The benefits of such innovations are clear from a medical standpoint. Access to such innovations would radiate from the center like the industrial revolution from London and the agricultural revolution form its multiple centers. Clines could form around people with the biology to support such a system, much like lactose persistence or G6PD. Those with access to the example synthesized here will surely be the Ulysses of their age. The professionals could that afford the higher priced modifications would have greater access to the resources that resonate at the level of sexual selection. This would lead to an ability to reproduce and sustain those offspring. Those left behind would be no different than those infants dying in areas like Sub-Saharan Africa because they simply lack the resources to access the two more recent revolutions that more developed nations have experienced. At a fundamental level all environments revolve around our Paleolithic brains. And just like these prior revolutions, the allelic fingerprints of the coming revolution will not diffuse across the entirety of the species equally. It will simply spread into the environments where the behavior is available and beneficial. However this course works out, it is surely occurring on a macroscopic level. In some ways we have are placing a toe into new evolutionary waters while the bulk of population remains in other evolutionary settings. Fischer reminds us that any extension of variation, even those that fail, is an aspect of evolution that is not a weakness but a strength.    

Thursday, November 20, 2008

The genes that pull our politcal strings.

In September 1960, if you were listening to the first presidential debate on the radio, you would have judged the vice president, Richard Nixon, to have won the debate. The debate was between himself and a young senator from Massachusetts, John F. Kennedy. Being that this debate took place during a technological boom in our history it was transmitted on the two major forms of communication. The aforementioned radio was quickly being replaced by the television as the source of information for the American public. It is of note that those who watched the debate judged JFK to be the winner of the debate against Richard Nixon. Those that analyzed the election of JFK would look back on this moment as the turning point of the campaign. An incumbent and popular Republican party engaged in a Cold-War with Russia favored a knowledgeable Vice President running for the highest office. In the end the televised debate doomed Nixon to failure by a hairs-breadth of votes. It is important to remember that there were two more debates that no one remembers. It was the first debate where Nixon was haggard, visibly tired, and unseemly that our genes spoke. The candidates’ appearance had been invisible to a listening audience. With the advent of technology which incorporated the visual, suddenly being presidential meant looking it.

Nixon didn’t contrast well against a youthful and handsome Kennedy. It did not matter what the two said, it mattered how they appeared. JFK was sexy while Nixon was not. In 2008 the youthful Senator Barrack Obama once again ran against an aged and established political figure. The votes have spoken and, much like the 1960 election, they have fallen towards the younger handsomer man. How much of this is our genes and how much is our intellect is an question that will not be settled anytime soon. The trend of appearance is also buttressed by within the 2008 election by the two Vice President hopefuls, Sarah Palin and Joe Biden. Palin has gathered considerable heat for spending over $150,000 on a new wardrobe, and her counterpart Joe Bidden has been poked in comedy circles for installing hair-plugs. These issues are intellectually trivial, but do have roots in our biology.

Our genes inform our actions just as our subconscious does. The two may even be one and the same in some regards. They are both subliminal, and they are both equally studied by separate branches of research. In Rome, Cicero, Caesar, and Brutus all practiced rhetoric together in order to manipulate people for their support. In this regard they were all politicians, and they understood that gathering power was as easy as gathering the hearts and minds of the people. This famous trope runs through all aspects of our modern news analysis. Every politician understands that support for their position comes from the bottom rungs up. What has been recently considered is how much our hearts and minds follow our genes. Being that we are a socially inclined species it is only natural that our politics are dictated by our social inclination. Non-human primates such as chimps and gorillas have a social structure that is defined by strength and ability. In our society we judges who should be the leaders by their qualifications, which is no different. If we are to align our thoughts with those of Kanazawa and Miller, we can see that how we judge the “best” is a complex system of signals centered on mating. The difference of our signals for who is the ‘best’ to mate with exists only by level of complexity. Those behaviors that helped us survive and reproduce in our evolutionary environment lend themselves to our modern one, and those politicians that tap these gene-level cues generally turn out for the better.

In our psychological makeup, psychosocial stress is transmitted to us hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal response. Our body judges our state of being through this avenue. One of the most potent ways to engage this response is through fear. If a politician can induce a fearful response by swathing his opponent in a demons cloak, he will win. A sense of discomfort and anxiety was invoked during the 2004 election. This tactic was ubiquitous through all elections, and was employed by both sides of the political spectrum. Each candidate spoke on how they would keep you safe and defined safety by their own terms. This plays to our base level, not our higher thought processes. Our genes and the environment help us define what is ‘safe’. A system where atheistic liberal baby-killers are expanding government looms large like an Orwellian nightmare is surely the favorite Republican bug-bear. Whereas an irrationally hawkish, gun totting, earth killing, politically organized racist right haunts the visions of many liberals.

In many ways our sense of security was once again tapped in the 2008 election. John McCain unashamedly played to ignorance and knee-jerk reactions in order to paint his opponent as a radical of many trades. Yet a real issue reared its chimerical head. Fears of economic downturns became the center of media attention, and candidates scrambled for their own brand of blanket to keep us warm during the coming crisis. Perhaps the appeal to a ‘second great depression’ played nicely with Barrack Obamas pre-established liberal economic structure. This paired well with his rational mindset, his cool demeanor, and his measured responses as the recipe for our gut-level verdict to appoint him president elect. This was truly a panacea for what will actually ail the nation in the years to come. It is in this way that our genes informed our actions on November 4th. Clearly a real danger is better than a hypothetical one.

This scenario has rarely been the case in our presidential history. We, as a nation, look for leaders only during times of crisis. This was true with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Woodrow Wilson and now Barrack Obama. The tradition since the time of Jackson has been to find someone that resonates with the people. We have attempted to place ourselves in the seat of American power. Examples of this are Geroge W. Bush, Harry S. Truman, and Bill Clinton. This is something like assertive mating. This point can be joined with a trend of increasingly progressive political moves since the Seneca Falls convention of 1848. Females, as pointed out in Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters have a different priority set than men. This event marks the first time women became organized in regards to American politics. If one is to look at the presidents of the United States over the 200 year history, we would find that a different level of social concern is introduced from 1848 on.

The rights of slaves were supported by many iconic women like Harriet Tubman. Woodrow Wilson, one of the most progressive presidents, was elected within the same year that women gained the right to vote. FDRs famous coalition was heavily supported by this demographic. From this point forward in our history a greater number of social programs have been installed into our national machinery. According to CNN, our most recent election saw women vote 56% for Obama. This is 3% above the national margin. If the logic of genes informing our actions is to speak for this pattern, it would fall in line with the lower fitness ceiling for women and a greater concern for social well being because of this fact. Social well being through communal action is a platform that Barrack Obama stood on in many of his public speeches. This act is even more interesting because a woman sat contra to Obama in this election. Surely this was a disappointment to the McCain campaign who tried to cull women and conservatives in one fell swoop. Clearly merit had no place within the consideration, and visage alone was not enough. Whether this speaks for the strength of certain genetic informants over the other or for our intellectualizing of the scenario will always be murky.

In the end, the JFK Nixon debate was not a result of our new media defining a new path to our lever pulling instincts. It was instead a new variable in a system that was already in play long before our ancestors became habitually bipedal. We have been selected for to group together, to choose our leaders by their apparent strength, to gravitate towards those that are more like ourselves, and to use fear as a gauge for danger. We have the ability to override our genes in many ways, but if you play the right chords, at the right times, and to the right crowd, you might get elected. The idea of politics has never been to appeal to the issues at hand; it has always been about constructing an image of an environment that will sway a voter in one direction or another. Rhetoric or internet, our mind is matter and our matter moves to the beat of the most archaic drum.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Human evolution within a historical timeframe

The environment is everything to human evolution. In regards to humans, the concept must encapsulate both physical and cultural aspects of environments. Various environs provide a testing ground which all mutations must face if they are to graduate to the level of a polymorphism. This would be any variation physical, cultural, and behavioral within a population that is expressed 1% or above within a population. If a polymorphism is significantly beneficial in the face of certain pressures it will be selected for. Especially potent advantages could eventually become ubiquitous. An example of such a polymorphism would be the foxp2 gene found in modern humans. This gene is so important to language that a variation causes syntax malfunction. This particular adaptation functions both within the evolutionary environment, where an adaptive communication set is key to survival in areas thick with predators, and is culturally necessary where mate access could depend on an ability to converse meaningfully. Surely our modern environment has only replaced predators with education centers and conversing meaningfully with superficial flirting. Even those without verbal communication depend upon sign language in order to express themselves in all the ways we are familiar with vocally.

At the core of success is the level of selection pressure present within the population. Selection is a mechanism measured by the individual fitness derived from traits and behaviors. On a larger scale, a population can also undergo pressures that shift the direction of allelic distribution. If we are to turn this concept towards punctuated events, such as pathogen driven bottlenecks, we can observe relatively quick changes in the allelic frequencies of a population. Survival of the Sickest outlines just such an event when describing the prevalence of hemachromatosis in northern European nations. Pathogens can create extremely harsh selection pressures which produce a quick change. Evolution does not always take this path though; biological changes are produced over a longer period of time in relation to cultural events. Lactose persistence is a salient example of such an event occurs after the Holocene and the uptake of animal domestication and agriculture.

Lactose is literary milk sugar and the innate ability to gain caloric benefit from this substance generally ceases at a certain age. A high level of the pancreatic enzyme lactase is requisite for this process to occur, and production of this enzyme is under genetic control. The presence of this enzyme in most infants is high until weaning occurs. If milk is consumed after weaning the undigested portion can cause abdominal pain. In mammals it is normal to become intolerant. Cultural centers where milk is derived from domesticated animals this is not the case. Indeed most Western nations tend to supplement their diet with cow’s milk without hesitation.

This genetically determined ability is clinal and clearly a product of evolution within our species. Northern portions of Europe, Africa, and Asia all demonstrate this ability where unprocessed milk is consumed. This pattern a gradually decreases as one moves from these centers into other environments with separate selection pressures. For instance, moving South and East across Europe will result in a decline in lactose persistence. In native populations with no admixture, such as Australia and Oceania, we see a 100% lack of lactose persistence (Mielke et al. 2008). This cline is an example of an evolutionary trend within the past 10,000 years.

as pastoralism activity became increasingly beneficial over the millennia. In other words those individuals who could digest milk were at a selective advantage over those who could not.

This pattern makes sense because milk promotes the uptake of calcium and aids in the normal bone growth. Children that could to digest and use milk would not run the risk of getting rickets in latitudes where the sun is less intense. Those individuals living in desert environments would be better able to make use of the milks water content, thus increasing their fitness. Studies on this ability project that the strength the selection factor would need to be about 4% with a starting frequency of .001% in non-European areas. Current levels of lactase persistence in Europe would need a selection pressure of 5-7% for it to be in line with domestication diffusion 3,000 years ago (Mielke, James et al. 2006). Although this is certainly one of the more widespread evolutionary patters observed in our time, it is not the only one.

Further allelic alterations can be seen in malarial environments. Adaptations of this short are to be found—but not limited to—the Mediterranean. The enzyme deficiency of Glucose-6-Phosphate-Dehydrogenase provides people with a certain amount of protection from the parasite which causes malaria. The function of this enzyme helps prevent oxidization of cells when they metabolize. Lack of this enzyme can result in certain dietary restrictions due to the provocation of negative reactions and has therefore been called favism (Mielke, James et al. 2006). This condition is beneficial in malaria stricken environments because it is thought to expose the parasite within infected cells. This occurs because cells under stress are more sensitive to the hydrogen peroxide being produced by the parasite, which allows for the agents of the immune system to identify and destroy the infection. On an interesting historical note, the Mediterranean region and the condition could be intimately tied to actions of ancient Rome 2,400 years ago.

As O’Sullivan and colleagues point out in their paper, “Deforestation, Mosquitoes, and Ancient Rome: Lessons for Today” an increased population, an open sewage system, and a sudden alteration of a landscape allows for the introduction of new disease vectors. The act of deforestation for agriculture expansion allowed for the build-up of the Pontine marshland which provided the perfect grounds for mosquitoes to breed (O’Sullivan et al, 2008). Although the genetic impacts of this behavior were not outlined within the paper, practices such as these provide a plausible explanation for the levels of the G6PD deficiency we see in the area. The idea that large, ancient population center is found in this region in conjunction with an artificial malarial environment is too coincidental to ignore. This event could have certainly heightened the frequency of an already present polymorphism.

Perhaps one of the more interesting and overlooked aspects of post-agricultural effects on humans is the idea of becoming domesticated. Perhaps it has to do with the stigma of the word “domesticate”. To be a domesticated animal makes us think of penned creatures being raised for consumption. Or it might be tied to the notion that humans are somehow beyond the reach of environmental selection. After all, we often see ourselves as the ones that alter our environments, not the other way around. We do understand the process of domestication through various death assemblages throughout history. In the paper, “Human Domestication Reconsidered” a number of skeletal changes are outlined in regards to domestication:

(1)change in body size, initially to smaller, with decreasing skeletal robusticity; (2) reduction in cranial capacity; (3) shortening of the facial region of skull, including jaws, sometimes associated with tooth crowding and maleruption and/or reduction in size of cheek teeth; (4) reduction in sexual dimorphism; and (5) greater diversity in shape and size of horns (in cattle, sheep, and goats). Domestication changes affecting only soft tissues, body biochemistry, and/or behavior and therefore archaeologically invisible in any direct form may include the following: (6) increasing variation in coat colour and hair structure; (7) increasing fat storage (subcutaneous and intramuscular); (8) enhanced physiological performance, including lactation; (9) precocity, extended breeding seasons, and greater sexual stimulation; (10) retention of juvenile behaviours into adulthood; (11) greater litter size and frequency of multiple births; (12) reduction in motor activity; (13) reduction in information acquisition systems; (14) reduction in intraspecific aggression, especially in males (though this may be attenuated defensive behaviour); and (15) increased docility as part of reduced environmental responsiveness. (Leach, 2003)

With this list in mind, Dr. Leach examines the modern human condition, pointing out that this shift is present within humans during the Pleistocene to Holocene shift. One must only think of the Nubian shift from hunting and gathering to agriculture to find an example of reduced cranial robusticity (Larsen, 1999). Whether this exemplifies domestication is another question all together. An important factor considered within this paper is that human built environments, such as the ones humans have been perfecting since the sedentary lifestyle allowed for permanent domiciles, has acted upon our biology in a way not unlike guided selection. The only hesitation to ascribe domestication to the modern human condition is the need for a significant emphasis on preserving certain stock. As we have observed historically there has been a special emphasis on this with the Eugenics movement in western nations at the beginning of the 20th century. Besides being a perversion of evolutionary theory, the concept is largely bankrupt and we have not seen eugenics in a significant level since these early attempts.

When just a few examples of biological variation are considered, we can easily find results of selective pressures that are surely evolutionary events. These microevolutinary shifts may not be the dramatic evidence we observe in the fossil record from Homo erectus to Homo sapiens, but that make them no less significant. If we keep in mind that the environment determines whether a variant is good or bad, we can place G6PD deficiency in a good category where malaria is found. We can also place lactose non-persistence in the “bad category within a pastorally dependent culture. Whatever the category we ascribe the evolutionary examples provided we must recognize that they are present, and that they are representative of our constantly shifting environments both physically and culturally.

Larsen, C.S. 1999. Bioarchaeology: Interpreting Behavior From the Human Skeleton.

Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Leach, H. M. 2003. Human Domestication Reconsidered. Current Anthropology. 44:

349-368.

Mielke, J.H., L.W. Konigsberg., J.H. Relethford. 2006. Human Biological Variation. Oxford

University Press, New York.

O'Sullivan, L., A. Jardine, et al. 2008. "Deforestation, mosquitoes, and ancient Rome: lessons for today”. (Biology in History)(Report)." BioScience 58(8): 756(5).

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

This is awesome.

So this is a succinct information dense video that handles a common question.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Palin and the prize.

So the news about V.P. hopeful Sarah Palin hit the news just moments ago. She is guilty of abuse of power. This, if nothing else, suggests that McCain didn’t really vet as much as he could’ve. I suppose they will spin this information to a political tune, and it will stick like eggs to Teflon. Still, this is a bit of foreshadowing for any who aren’t paying attention. You can read the complete article here:  

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7662820.stm 

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Thoughts on the economy and political poistioning.

So, perhaps a plug page wasn’t the smartest thing for the second entry into this Blog. Apparently it is something frequent in the bot driven world of search engine destruction.
From a mythological perspective, the past financial events have produced our current Nemesis. It seems appropriate the steady dismantling of the infrastructure we built after the last great crash came out like a badly played game of Jenga. It isn’t really a mystery that our methods were ill advised, that the hands off system that couldn’t provide for us in the 19th century would do the same in the 21st. Some people are still shocked. Mainly this is my generation. I am not surprised at this. Before a couple of weeks ago many people could rattle off the last six MVP’s of the superbowl before they could draw a line from one point of history to another. More people can tell you intimate details of the current American Idol before they can relate McCain to Hoover on fundamentals. This is also the generation of people that are currently taking the reins of the American economy.
I personally know more liberal arts graduates, drama graduates, and English graduates than I do science majors. This is a sad statement since I am a science major and can recognize all of my classmates. The difference is, we travel through the curriculum together. There aren’t that many classes for us. If you wanted to find a Literature or humanities credit though, chances are you have the run of times and teachers.
We’re people, and we’re pretty good at pointing the finger at others when things go wrong. As of late, the politicians have been pointing towards one another. Some people are pointing towards what little remained to constrict the free market, claiming that this would’ve never occurred had they truly been able to run wild. The simple fact that this didn’t occur is my silver lining. It’s even worse that I have to find a hypothetical for comfort.
On the other side of the coin, Democrats seem to pointing the finger squarely towards the red. This seems appropriate to some degree, but they’re still rich enough. This would really seem to be more of an elected Oligarchy than any sort of democratic society. I think that is another thing that people aren’t aware of. They don’t really run this nation, but they let politicians tell them they will. I am not sure why this is. This is probably because we’re happy enough with a flat-screen television, a game on television, beer in our hand, and Chili-Fritos in our bowl.
Our leaders have entered the realm of the public, and have since Jackson told us it was really up to us. It really isn’t. At the best of times this is a Republic. Which is fine, I don’t want the common man in the Whitehouse. I think that might be what has gone wrong in the last few decades. Tennyson wrote "I mete and dole unequal laws unto a savage race, that hoard, and sleep, and feed, and know not me." Ulysses complaint was that his public was unaware of his presence.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Spammer?

I got flagged as a spammer Blog. It's just midterms. I'll return to this after I am done filling my mind with everything they want me to learn. I've had plenty of ideas. The state of education and our culture being one of them. I had a great conversation today about just the topic. I'll post here soon.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Time to plug

Besides the few people I have mentioned from my past (one), there are a number of other sources of inspiration I would like to take a moment to point out. Most of these people are literary sources. There are of course many others out there, but these are the few that I can recall without hitting my bookshelves. I would also like to note that my ideas in no way reflect their own: 

   

Brain Green: http://www.superstringtheory.com/people/bgreene.html 

Robi Sen: http://www.therobisen.com/blog 

Steven Novella: http://www.theness.com/neurologicablog 

The Nonprophets: http://www.nonprophetsradio.com 

David Hume: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hume 

The Skeptics Guide to The Universe: http://www.theskepticsguide.org 

Karl Popper: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/popper 

Peter Watson: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Watson_(business_writer) 

Richard Dawkins: http://richarddawkins.net 

Sam Harris: http://www.samharris.org 

Benjamin Franklin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Franklin 

Thomas Jefferson: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson 

Samuel Clemens: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Twain 

Thomas Hobbes: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hobbes 

Jonathan Glover: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Glover 

   

Yes, I did use Wikipedia as a reference for these people. I don’t do this in papers or anything, but it still gives a good overview of people that would otherwise have no page. All of these people, in one way or another has influenced my thought type. Most of these people have a single thing in common in that they build upon the ideas of others and they think for themselves. I suppose that is really the goal here. I also think a good deal of them are scientists in one fashion or another. They certainly are imbued with the clarity of thought required.  

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

An introduction

I suppose this is a rant a long time coming. There was a time in my life when I was so far gone that I can’t even imagine where I would be now if I hadn’t changed. The thing I can’t really place is what initiated the change?  

The shift I am talking about is my current secular mindset. I am fully aware of the craziest things I used to think. The ideas I harbored about myself and the world. They were off the beaten path. They were out of the norm. What they definitely weren’t though is any more insane than a group of politically motivated idiots that thinks the world is 6,000 years old or less. They simply have better representation. 

If I were to make a confession about the things I used to believe, I could think of a time when I didn’t question it. I suppose this was the impetus for my own personal change. The time I began to question things that seemed self-evident. If anything started me on this path, it was my desire to read over anything else. Conflicting ideas are a great battlefield for complacent acceptance to die.  

I can remember being a questioning child. But, like all children, I can also remember the security of trusting authority. I was, at times, also known to be a stubborn and impudent child. I think the latter has hindered me in my teenage years, but served me in my adult years. Equally true is my trust in authority. I would think this is true for all people. The only change would be what we consider authority.  

Authority, for me, used to be anyone older than myself. From there, it was anyone who put enough effort into writing a book. Thereafter, it was anyone who could demonstrate a sort of competency of facts. This final point is where my world actually collapsed. I suppose it is a small thank you to dedicate my current placement in the world to a single person. I met Robi Sen through a network of what I would now consider the clinically insane. It was a stroke of luck that he was the one that contacted me.  

Robi and I practiced martial arts together for a little more than two years. Originally I respected him for his command of the martial arts he taught me. In time though, I came to respect him for his mental acuity, and his ability to dissect situations into components that functioned within the real world. He mentioned two things that have stuck with me to this day. The first, “We do the things that are most difficult for us, so when something difficult arrives, it is not such a big deal. The second, “Question everything everyone tells you. Even what I say.” It was this last bit that caught me off guard the most.  

Robi moved away to continue the natural arc of his life. A year after that, he came back for a time. I had taken everything he had said to heart. I had learned a lot. And, more importantly, I had continued to read. This time though I wasn’t reading fiction, I wasn’t reading half-baked ideas of some idiot claiming to understand the secrets of life, I was reading physics. I was learning math. I was reading philosophy. I came to understand the importance of history. Robi had provided some of the books, but the others I sought out on my own. When I talked to Robi that time, my final bit of misunderstanding broke.  

We discussed energy, and its importance in martial arts. I had never really comprehended what he was getting at when we’d started training, but I knew now. I had, through all of this, held a special place for something extraordinary outside of what could be. I had set aside a place where gnomes could hide, or energy fields, or a teapot in space. Robi told me everything that occurs, whether you could measure it or not was physics. Everything we observe obeys the laws of the universe. It is our misunderstanding of the situation that is imperfect.  

As I’ve progressed through my education, I have found this to be true. Science has opened up true wonder to my eye. The amount of innovation it takes to trick out the secrets of a parabolic arc gone awry is simply astounding. When I began looking at why people are what they are, I wanted to know their potential. I think I understand that now. Our most important legacy has been the expansion of knowledge over generations. This is something that has built into a torrent. What is even more interesting is that when you reach a new cusp, you are still staring into a vast wasteland of what we don’t know. This is surely the sentiment that Karl Popper was getting at when he said, “Our knowledge can only be finite, while our ignorance must remain ignorant.” Our potential and limitations lie within this statement. Our path can only be one of science, because it is the only system we have to truly understand what functions within the world we live in. It is the only system that checks itself, and much like math, it is only limited by the people that engage in the process of solution.