The Evolutionary Persistence of Left-Handedness
Biology, Culture, and the Global Convergence Toward a 12–13% "Dutch Ceiling." Why approximately 10% of the world's population has always been left-handed is one of evolutionary biology's most persistent puzzles. The trait survives not despite being a minority but because of it. Through a mechanism called frequency-dependent selection, left-handers gain a "surprise advantage" in competitive interactions precisely because their movements are unfamiliar to the right-handed majority. This evolutionary benefit is balanced by biological costs and centuries of cultural suppression. However, as digital technologies and modern education erode the practical disadvantages of being left-handed, global reported rates are converging toward a natural equilibrium of 12–13%—a phenomenon known as the "Dutch ceiling." This article synthesizes the latest evolutionary, genetic, neuroscientific, and cross-cultural research to explain why left-handedness has nev...