Human evolution appears to be accelerating compared to ancient times, such as around 4000 BC.

1. Genetic Evolution Has Sped Up in the Last 10,000 Years

  • A major 2007 study (“Recent acceleration of human adaptive evolution” – Hawks et al.) found that natural selection has been acting more rapidly on the human genome since the advent of agriculture (~10,000 years ago).

  • This is largely due to:

    • Larger population sizes → More mutations to select from

    • New environments → Urban life, diverse climates, domesticated animals

    • New diets → e.g., lactose tolerance evolved after dairy farming

    • Disease pressure → e.g., genes related to malaria or immuni

Example: The lactase persistence gene (allows adults to digest milk) spread rapidly in populations that adopted dairy farming.


2. Cultural Evolution Greatly Accelerates Human Change

  • Unlike genetic evolution, cultural evolution can occur over decades or centuries, not millennia.

  • Around 4000 BC (6,000+ years ago), humans were just entering the Bronze Age, with:

    • Early writing systems (e.g. Sumerian cuneiform)

    • City-states

    • Basic metallurgy

  • Today we experience technological revolutions every few decades.

 Cultural change acts as a feedback loop on biological evolution:

  • Example: Agriculture led to denser populations → more disease → selection for immune genes


3. Accumulation of Knowledge and Innovation

  • Human innovation builds cumulatively.

  • Unlike other species, we record and pass on knowledge, accelerating each generation’s capacity to change the world.

  • From domestication and irrigation in 4000 BC → to electricity, AI, gene editing in under 6,000 years.


Modern Twist: Are We Still Evolving Biologically?

  • Yes, but modern medicine, global mixing, and changing selection pressures have altered the path.

  • Some argue we’re entering a phase of self-directed evolution:

    • CRISPR and genetic engineering

    • Human-machine integration (e.g. prosthetics, implants)


Summary

Compared to around 4000 BC, human evolution has accelerated—especially due to:

  • Larger populations and mutation rates

  • Massive environmental and lifestyle changes

  • Rapid cultural and technological innovation

  • Feedback between culture and biology