I'm talking about the long term genetic impacts which might influence our species. And my time horizon is really long .... I'm talking about a sustainable future here .... thousands of years in the future.
My crystal ball is just the science of population genetics supported by paleoanthropological evidence.
Think about the setting: a resource poor world, a "global" island so to speak.
In such settings the phenomenon of "island dwarfing" has been observed.
This sees isolated species, released from the pressures of predation but constrained by limited resources, evolving either smaller (usually) or larger forms than would otherwise be the case.
This has happened at least once in the history of the human species ....
About 800K year ago our ancestor Homo Erectus moved to the island of Flores in Indonesia ... in this island environment over a few thousands years they became a new species. About 1 meter tall, and with a brain capacity of 380cm3 (this is about 4-5 times less than the current human capacity and 1/3 the brain capacity of Home erectus.
They did seem to have a culture though and rudimentary technology (as discussed in this
BBC Article)
Think about the implications ... isn;t this the real meaning of Odulvai Gorge ... no more humans . A short brainless monkey .....
Thoughts, ideas?


If only Colin Campbell had included that small statement in his newsletter, or possibly this statement :-



Though that scenario in any case requires accepting a level of genetic determinism (J Hanson style) that probably isn't realistic - I doubt one would find any significant genetic differences between POers and non-POers. 



