Dysorganism wrote:My guess is that human evolution is faster now than ever before. As many have pointed out evolutionary success is to have the maximum number of fertile offspring. Palaeolithic humans were well adapted to their environment. There were probably few new genes that gave a strong selective advantage. The reproductive strategy was to have few children, invest heavily in raising each child and to have low child mortality compared to most other species.Not sure how you arrived at that conclusion about human evolution being faster now. Almost everyone in developed countries live long lives, so there's less selective pressure than there used to be. And the human population is huge compared to the olden days, so evolution is going to be slower than then. As a simplified example, say the human population was down to ten people. Any survival characteristic is going to be heavily adopted in the next generation and all the generations after that, whereas nowadays it would get mostly lost in the general population.
Poor people around the world have large numbers of children compared to affluent families. I'm pretty sure hunter-gatherer mothers were popping out babies right and left. Family planning wasn't an advanced science, and it was high infant mortality that kept the number of surviving offspring down. In African countries today women have huge numbers of kids because of their high mortality rate so they'll have enough children to take care of them in old age, and I suspect that it was the same in prehistoric times.
But I suspect that wasn't your point, exactly. I do believe that each species arrives at the optimum number of offspring per mama. In the case of humans, the babies require tremendous and prolonged care by the mother, because in order to develop the brainpower that gives them their survival advantage, it's a slow process and involves learning from the elders.