Aoi wrote:
So the question becomes not why do people have pubic hair, but why did homo sapiens evolve to have fewer and thinner hairs on most body parts.
This line in and of itself is so frequently parroted that it has become the status quo. So I shall take your advice and form a reversal. Intra-organismally, there are areas of differing hair intensity. The gonads and face are the most intensely covered. The question that should be asked is, "Why are these the only parts of the body, save the head, to escape atrophy at the hands of evolution?"
As a matter of pedantic semantics, the only studies showing an 80% loss of body heat from the head use test subjects stuffed into super-jackets/survival suits/MechWarriors/etc. Though as much as 20% of the blood in the body may be found in the head at any given time, the 80% statistic is a widespread myth akin to the theory that you should eat vitamins because most people only access 10% of their brain.
To answer my original question in this post with my original idea in this thread, the coarseness and length of pubic and facial hair may have been used as a whisker-like extension of one's ability to sense the world, leading to a survival advantage. Sure, the onset of pubic hair is a nice way to signal fertility. In addition, those males with higher levels of testosterone will, perhaps, grow more facial/pubic hair; or grow it earlier; or mature earlier. The same individuals might have higher levels of aggression, which might be not wholly recouped for by enhanced sensitive-region sensitivity. Stranger things in evolution have happened.
If that all seems unfair, hold on; I'm still going to answer the quotation.
http://my.opera.com/vrv1/blog/
Hope that link works. To paraphrase the theory, the human body has better endurance than almost all other animals. Though a human generates way more heat when running, the fact that the same human is essentially flying flat-part-first into the dry wind with previously unheard-of sweat glands turn the human body into one giant heat-dissipater. The animals which we used as prey must pant to cool down, but cannot pant when at a gallop. However many hours it took, our ancestors would chase down a gazelle or whatever until it died/stopped from heat exhaustion.
How do we know this? Well, at least one African tribe (and likely others) still use this method. And, the distant Taramahura indians of Mexico are nomadic runners by definition, each a playfully joyous contender in frequent 50-100 mile races for, as best as it can be translated into English, "s**ts and giggles". Did I mention they have almost no suicide, cancer, foot injuries, diabetes, heart disease, et freaking cetera?
To put it bluntly, we're runners by nature. It seems absurd to suggest that our loss of hair, leaving room for sweat glands and their exudate, didn't have at least some small part in our species-wide dehairification.
_________________
"I tell you the truth when I say that whoever seeks will find, and the finding will cause him to seek, but in the seeking is hidden the meaning of Life."
-Jesus Christ
Not a Christian, just a thinker.