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  • The ability to drink milk throughout our lifetime, known as lactose tolerance, evolved about

  • 10 thousand years ago; over the last century and a half, the average height of a human

  • being has increased by roughly 10 centimeters; and within the last 6 and a half decades the

  • global life span has shot up nearly 20 years largely thanks to science.

  • Breakthroughs in science have propelled our species forward - in fact, National Geographic

  • and GE’s new seriesBreakthroughcovers some cutting edge innovations that are happening,

  • today; from biology and technology merging, to solutions for our water crisis. But, what

  • will humanity look like in 1000 years?

  • It’s already hard enough to remember a world without smartphones, but scientists predict

  • that within the next few decades, computers will reach the computational speed of the

  • human brain. Not only will they be able to speak and interact,

  • but listen and remember. This also leads to a philosophy known as transhumanism. In the

  • future, nanobots (or tiny robots) will be subtly integrated into our bodies enhancing

  • our own abilities! No longer will we be limited by our own physiology, but truly become a

  • mixture of biology and machine on the inside.

  • Ever heard ofUtility Fog’? Imagine a cloud of countless microscopic robots which

  • can be rearranged into virtually any configuration nearly instantaneously. Buildings could be

  • constructed as necessary, and disassembled when space was needed for something else.

  • Picture your house disassembling when you leave in the morning so that the space can

  • be used for something else! With increased urbanization and globalization

  • the 7000 languages that are spoken globally today will likely dip under 100.

  • As we move even further into the future, the world’s rising temperature and accompanying

  • deterioration in the protective ozone layer will play a major role. Added UV radiation

  • reaching the planet may create a scenario where darker skin becomes an evolutionary

  • advantage, as it protects against UV damage. Increasing temperatures may also affect our

  • size; taller and thinner bodies would be better at dissipating excess body heat, as it creates

  • the best body surface area to volume ratio. Of course, these types of changes take 10s

  • or hundreds of thousands of years and will depend on our ability to avoid or protect

  • ourselves from nature.

  • New traits from mutations may also arise - perhaps a new eye color, or unique abilities! Even

  • today, one man has been documented with the ability to consume and digest nearly anything,

  • including metal, glass and even toxic chemicals due to a genetic mutation. Others live with

  • a condition called tetrachromacy, where they can see 100 times more colors than the rest

  • of us. But these traits are only likely to persist if they have some selective advantage

  • - so don’t expect a mutant like school-for-the-gifted any time soon.

  • But artificial selection or human influenced changes will likely drive most of our evolution.

  • Well modify our babies genes before birth to eliminate diseases they may carry, or include

  • desirable traits for our offspring. But, while it may make us smarter, stronger, and better

  • looking, such genetic similarity or lack of human diversity leaves room for a single new

  • disease of the future to wipe out the entire human race.

  • In the words of Stephen HawkingSooner or later disasters" such as an asteroid collision

  • or a nuclear war could wipe us all out. But once we spread out into space and establish

  • independent colonies, our future should be safe.” Space colonization, it seems, is

  • an inevitable part of our future. At the end of it all, we may even conquer

  • death by scanning our brains - atom by atom - and transferring that information into computers.

  • In this way we could travel at the speed of light as information patterns, unrestricted

  • by our bodies, and requiring no food. Where our current human generational cycle takes

  • around 20 years, a digital individual could replicate themselves in seconds or minutes.

  • It’s a brave new world out there - and yet, you may be surprised by some of the incredible

  • science that is happening today! That’s what the showBreakthrough” - which airs

  • on November 1st at 9pm - attempts to highlight. The science of today, that tomorrow’s future

  • will be based upon. It’s a really fantastic series of 6 episodes on the National Geographic

  • Channel. Be sure to check it out, and let us know what you think.

  • And subscribe for more weekly science videos.

The ability to drink milk throughout our lifetime, known as lactose tolerance, evolved about

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