
TL;DR
This paper compares biological and memetic evolution in hominids, explaining the timescale of human population growth through an analogy with genetic evolution, and shows that sapiens' emergence was an automatic process.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking genetic evolution timescales to memetic evolution, explaining human population growth and the emergence of sapiens as an automatic process.
Findings
The Foerster timescale can be derived from genome information and generation times.
Human population growth follows a simple exponential model governed by memetic evolution.
The emergence of sapiens was an automatic evolutionary process, not a hard step.
Abstract
The last few million years on planet Earth have witnessed two remarkable phases of hominid development, starting with a phase of biological evolution characterised by rather rapid increase of the size of the brain. This has been followed by a phase of even more rapid technological evolution and concomitant expansion of the size of the population, that began when our own particular `sapiens' species emerged, just a few hundred thousand years ago. The present investigation exploits the analogy between the neo-Darwinian genetic evolution mechanism governing the first phase, and the memetic evolution mechanism governing the second phase. From the outset of the latter until very recently -- about the year 2000 -- the growth of the global population N was roughly governed by an equation of the form dN/Ndt= N/T*, in which T* is a coefficient introduced (in 1960) by von Foerster, who evaluated…
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