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MAN'S FUTURE IN EVOLUTION

JAMA. 1929;93(5):384-385. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710050038017.
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The future of man in this world seems at present to be a subject of comparatively little human concern, perhaps because there are few definite data on which to base any cogent speculations, and few persons, at most, who are equipped either by temperament or by training to venture into the field of guesswork. Although the study of the evolution of living forms has made great strides, the story of the past of man still remains fragmentary. Man in something like his present form is a relatively recent comer; there are intimations that he approached his present status within less than thirty thousand years, which is less than one tenth, possibly less than one twentieth, of his existence. Man is probably not apart in his origin but belongs to the rest of the living world. His known transformation from the Neanderthal individual to the Homo sapiens of today furnishes an

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