I don't mean to take away from the other creatures on the planet as there are plenty of them that can challenge humans for the "best of" award. I'd have to say the deep-sea anglerfishes are pretty darn cool. But since we (hominids) were the last major group of organisms to evolve, that would make us the "most" evolved lifeform.Indeed. But "pinnacle of evolution" is a rather loaded phrase, I think. It may seem a little presumptuous to assume that we are the best that 3.8 billion years of evolution has to offer. I think it is fair to say that we are just as evolved as bacteria (they have, in fact, been evolving far longer than we have). But it is also fair to say we are more complex (however this metric is measured) than many other organisms. And I think it is further fair to say that if we turned the clock back a few billion years and let it all happen again that there is no reason to expect two big brained primates ought to be the ones having this discussion.
Who knows who or what may be having this conversation in 3 billion years AFTER humans are gone. I'd put my money on some type of highly evolved cephalopod.
Well of course humans are not above every single disease on the planet mainly because they have not been cured yet and new strains are continuously evolving to beat our vaccines. AIDS, malaria, influenza, yellow fever and the like are mostly problems in the third world where people live closer to nature and have poor health care systems (and many are illiterate and uneducated). But if you look at the average European or American, we do not live by the rules of natural selection. We overharvest the land to a point where we have to import our food, manipulate our food to make it bigger and "better", build shelters to house us out of the elements, and have vaccines to prevent us from dying of disease. We also keep people alive that shouldn't really be alive (both diseased and disabled) and practice lifestyles that wouldn't benefit wild animals. We also do not have tooth and nail competition for territory and mates.I think that this, too, may be another another claim that needs qualification. On what basis do you think we are above natural selection? In what way is evolution not working itself out in the AIDS epidemic? How about the thousands of people who die each year in the US from influenza? Or the millions who die of starvation and diseases such as dysentery, malaria, yellow fever, Dengue fever, pneumonia, tuberculosis and various and sundry viruses causing encephalitis? And what of those who contract but do not succumb to these diseases?
A better way to phrase this is to compare how many MORE Americans would die if we had none of the things we have above. Imagine how much smaller the population of the US and the world would be if we didn't have all of these artificial advantages?For these reasons I believe Americans and other first world countries are above natural selection. Those in the third world are also above it, but to a lesser extent.