Humans
have made profound changes to the Earth. The resulting societal
challenges of the Anthropocene (e.g., climate change and impacts,
renewable energy, adaptive infrastructure, disasters, pandemics, food
insecurity, and biodiversity loss) are complex and systemic, with
causes, interactions, and consequences that cascade across a globally
connected system of systems. In this Critical Review, we turn to our
“origin story” for insight, briefly tracing the formation
of the Universe and the Earth, the emergence of life, the evolution
of multicellular organisms, mammals, primates, and humans, as well
as the more recent societal transitions involving agriculture, urbanization,
industrialization, and computerization. Focusing on the evolution
of the Earth, genetic evolution, the evolution of the brain, and cultural
evolution, which includes technological evolution, we identify a nested
evolutionary sequence of geophysical, biophysical, sociocultural,
and sociotechnical systems, emphasizing the causal mechanisms that
first formed, and then transformed, Earth systems into Anthropocene
systems. Describing how the Anthropocene systems coevolved, and briefly
illustrating how the ensuing societal challenges became tightly integrated
across multiple spatial, temporal, and organizational scales, we conclude
by proposing an evolutionary, system-of-systems, convergence paradigm
for the entire family of interdependent societal challenges of the
Anthropocene.