Biology hasn't changed.
I agree for the most part. But 74s never made a point about the evolution of man, at least not in the quoted post.
Take a baby from the jungle and bring them up in the city. You get 100% perfect adaptation. That proves that tech hasn't had time to affect evolution. At the point that someone from the jungle is fundamentally impaired from ever operating at the level of city-folk, then you could make the claim that evolution was necessarily affected by tech.
A baby from the jungle brought up in the city immediately after before language development
is from the city. If you're saying that anyone from the jungle can be integrated into society, just understand feral children's developmental problems.
Also, who gave a shit about how humans are evolving? We were talking about society. We're not Homo novus or whatever, but we have a
far different society than we used to. Ancient Rome to right now is a far greater change than Homo neanderthalensis -> Homo erectus, regardless or the time difference.
But the baby-from-the-jungle's brain has actually been shaped by tech - 2 million years of hunter-gatherer tech. And that tech/evolution cycle explains all the cognitive adaptations to modern life (proved because hunter-gatherers do in fact adapt perfectly well).
Yeah, humans are adaptive. That's why we're adapting to the internet, and forming our culture with it.
Also, name one example of hunter-gatherer technology that we are automatically, instinctively inclined to and I'll tell you that it's because simple machines and trial and error makes sense. A feral child probably can't make an axe from the woods on their first try, no matter what the "Jungle Book" says.
I added it to my last post, but that's slipped to the previous page. Training a dog to do new tricks doesn't change their innate dog-ness.
Dogs are dogs, and men are men. Comparing the basic, instinct-based life of an individual dog to
all of human society and development is fallacious.
Training a human to operate machines likewise doesn't change their innate human-ness. Sure, some things are going to be malleable, but other things are immutable consequences of how we're constructed.
Wait, so you originally said that our minds are shaped by hunter-gatherer technology, and now you say that machines don't change us? Where is the line drawn?
Please clarify your post, I can imagine that I've misconstrued many of your points. Also let me know if any of this in unclear.