Sunday, August 14, 2011

"Another Adaptive Population Perspective"

I have recently developed further my perspective, adapted from perceptions, concerning the human population. I am sure I have had rants concerning "survival of the fittest" of the human population with variables of progression regarding mental and physical fitness with parallel to skills and trades, will and human potential.

I see or perceive that when parents give birth or adopt a child, there is instantly an emotional, spiritual, and physical attachment, directly from the parents, and indirectly from society. When the attachment is conceived and developed, the symbiosis of a practical, yet somewhat pure moral reason becomes part of that child; the moral being that we have a critical moral and personal conviction to directly use death for eugenics or population reduction for direct or indirect supplement to "survival of the fittest".

Frankly, I can only provide weak examples to support my adaptive perspectives developed from my perceptions. An overweight man living on welfare with a non-parasitic intent concerning money can care for and teach his children morals, trades, and disciplines, providing a small, yet complex contribution to society, though indirect. A woman with aids and mental disorders can be a catalyst for new ideas for other people, resulting in shared philosophy, motivation for human will, and more. One possibility could be newly developed or improved medicine. A homeless man could have a superior genetic code that could aid in scientific research with a possible outcome of healthy and progressive results for the human body.

Humans utilize and develop technology and engineering, aiding in the longevity of life by making different tasks easier, communicate, fight wars, aid in research and development, and more.

Regardless of fitness, mental or physical, everyone plays an indirect part. Negative actions from one group could result in positive actions from another group, and vice-versa.

There remains a possibility that an event concerning chaos, such as a nuclear attack, enemy-combatant invasion, or the fantasy of a zombie outbreak that "survival of the fittest" will be a main principle. If you process possible chaos mentally, you may perceive that a chaotic event for survival will weed out the weakest, leaving room for the "fittest" to redevelop as a population.

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