Humans evolve themselves
Darwin's theory of evolution holds that individuals within a species that best adapt to a change in environment will pass on their advantageous trait onto their progeny, ensuring "survival of the species." What has typically been assumed is that the environment changes, and some individuals in a species that are better able to adapt to the changes pass on their advantages to future generations. And those changes have always seemed independent of human intervention.
But a study showing recent human evolution among several east African groups of gaining tolerance to the lactose is fascinating because it shows that a group of humans changes itself to a new way of life, and then those individuals within that group that are best suited to that change will pass on its genetic advantage to its descendants. In other words, humans shape culture through their behavior, which then in turn shapes their genetic makeup as certain genes become advantageous and spread until they are present in nearly all members of the species.
Here's the take from the NY Time's editorial board.
The Milk of Evolution
Published: December 14, 2006
Evolution is a process that most of us associate with a geological time scale — the slow elucidation of life over the last 3.5 billion years. We also tend to assume that the most recent signs of continuing evolution must be happening in species with short life spans and rapid reproductive rates.
A team of scientists has now discovered that an important human genetic trait — a tolerance in adults for the milk sugar called lactose — might have developed in several East African ethnic groups 2,700 to 6,800 years ago. That is astonishingly recent.
It may also be the first genetic example of what researchers call convergent evolution in humans. In other words, lactose tolerance among African raisers of livestock arose independently of the same adaptive trait in northern European pastoralists. But there is something still more surprising about this discovery. The genetic change came about because of cultural change. The shift to cattle raising some 9,000 years ago gave an immediate survival advantage to adults who could digest milk, an ability infants usually lost as they aged.
We are used to the idea that species evolve because of changes in their natural environment. But part of the natural environment of humans is culture itself, and it is striking to think that genetic adaptation in humans has been driven, at least in part, by how humans have chosen to live. The dynamism of human culture has always seemed to move faster than evolution itself, but this discovery suggests otherwise. To understand this about ourselves is to realize how little we know about the long-term effects of the ways we choose to live.

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