It’s also that if you take things that improve one side of mental performance it’s likely to harm another. This isn’t massively surprising to me: you’d expect that if upping a single hormone level or whatever would simply improve performance overall then evolution would have ‘found’ it. But presumably the same is true of giving performance-enhancing drugs to less intelligent animals—or, for that matter, giving people steroids etc. to increase their physical performance.
But just because drugs to make you run faster might lower your life expectancy, that doesn’t mean our current running speed is the best evolution or technology can achieve. The problem is that any complex adaptation, like intelligence, is going to be a ‘sweet spot’ in the sense that a random massive change in a single factor will make it less succesful. That doesn’t mean that evolution, or potentially much more sophisticated technological enhancement, can’t improve matters.
Also, the ‘something’s going to get worse’ principle only holds if what we consider bad is the same as what evolution selects against. It could in principle be true that humans became much more intelligent if they lost something that made them capable of defending themselves, reproducing, making allies or whatever. If our aims are different to what benefits our genes’ survival, we may well be able to improve on nature: as we do with artificial sweetners, sex with condoms and other cunning tricks.
There’s also the situation of “local maxima”: It’s possible (probable) that there are ways to make humans smarter through evolution, but the intermediate steps have poor results, causing a resistance to progress.
Diversity of a population plays a role too. If I’m well below Feynman level (and I am), then there’s a possibility that I can slightly improve my cognitive abilities without any negative consequences.
My experience with nootropics (racetams) seems to support this, as far as it is possible for anecdotal evidence.
It’s also that if you take things that improve one side of mental performance it’s likely to harm another. This isn’t massively surprising to me: you’d expect that if upping a single hormone level or whatever would simply improve performance overall then evolution would have ‘found’ it. But presumably the same is true of giving performance-enhancing drugs to less intelligent animals—or, for that matter, giving people steroids etc. to increase their physical performance.
But just because drugs to make you run faster might lower your life expectancy, that doesn’t mean our current running speed is the best evolution or technology can achieve. The problem is that any complex adaptation, like intelligence, is going to be a ‘sweet spot’ in the sense that a random massive change in a single factor will make it less succesful. That doesn’t mean that evolution, or potentially much more sophisticated technological enhancement, can’t improve matters.
Also, the ‘something’s going to get worse’ principle only holds if what we consider bad is the same as what evolution selects against. It could in principle be true that humans became much more intelligent if they lost something that made them capable of defending themselves, reproducing, making allies or whatever. If our aims are different to what benefits our genes’ survival, we may well be able to improve on nature: as we do with artificial sweetners, sex with condoms and other cunning tricks.
There’s also the situation of “local maxima”: It’s possible (probable) that there are ways to make humans smarter through evolution, but the intermediate steps have poor results, causing a resistance to progress.
Diversity of a population plays a role too. If I’m well below Feynman level (and I am), then there’s a possibility that I can slightly improve my cognitive abilities without any negative consequences.
My experience with nootropics (racetams) seems to support this, as far as it is possible for anecdotal evidence.