It depends how the civilization is in the hypothetical "future" that I stated. It would depend on how the humans would store information and if that information was erased, it would be disastorous.
Also, evolution does somewhat have a "direction." It adapts nearly all aspects of any given organism depending on it's enviroment. If you live in the ocean, your skin can withstand water for the duration of your life, while land animals if in the water long enough will damage your skin. If an organism lives in extreme cold or extreme hot, the organism is adapted to where it can efficiently survive it's entire life relative to the temperature it's adapted to. Bats live in caves (no light) therefore their optical part of their brain is never stimulated. At first you'd think they'd die off but what happens? They evolve to have sonar sensory and can survive without eyesight.
The same applies to infections. Why are some animals immune to certain diseases while others aren't? Most likely they've had more exposure and over a greator time and have developed a natural resistant to what infections are common for their species. Humans aren't born magically with immunities to some diseases that are life threatening to other animals, and weakness to other diseases. We've gained certain resistances to certain infections through evolution. Now if 90% of all infections had a cure, we'd most definitely use our immune system less, since our immune system doesn't need to work, only on occasion for the other 10% of those uncurable by technology. If kept not using our immune system, let's say for a few million years, do you really think that the race as whole will still have the same immune system from before? This is very doubtful, because the use of the immune system has become obsolete and isn't used enough.
This applies to certain unused organs in our body. We don't need them anymore so they don't work anymore. They are obsolete. So apparently in funny ways, nature does has a plan... a plan for survival and adaptation.
EDIT: Also I'd like to declare a bit of criticism when you said "Evolution does not "try its best" for anything, it has no sense of direction or purpose. It is not a sentient thing."
You say this with sheer certainty that evolution is 100% factual. While I've researched evolution (many times), and agree overall that it's highly probably, nothing is absolute fact as of now. Believing with 100%, absolute certainty that any scientific theory is completely factual is actually ignorance and is avoided in science. No one can say for complete certainty that evolution is 100% true (could be, or could partially be, or could not be at all), current laws of physics (what if physics is a local thing and is different somewhere else? are we missing a lot of information since we're here on this earth, and the universe is supposedly over 13 billion light years across?), etc. Granted, for our local environment, our current knowledge of physics works, and evolution seems almost obvious. But I would suggest avoiding complete certainty on anything scientific, because most of the time things can change and new theories can arise. Our current species is only documented into the tens to hundreds of thousands of years old. Compared to some species or the age of the earth, we are still a very feeble, ignorant and learning species who hasn't mastered the universe yet. Cheers.