I can assure you that we are still evolving - it's no coincidence that some people have wisdom teeth, and some people don't. Or why the Western world struggles with their teeth overcrowding, and other parts of the world don't. Why we're taller now than we were a couple of hundred years ago, or why our little toes are getting smaller... just a few examples that tend to get overlooked.
The process of natural selection never stops, we are constantly exposed to different selective pressures - the teeth example is just one - we don't 'grind' like our ancestors used to, hence not needing wisdom teeth. And don't have the same demands on our teeth with our current diets, hence dental overcrowding. You don't find these dental features in areas of the world that still maintain a more 'primitive' diet. Google me if you don't believe me. Or I can link some scholarly articles.
So, the pressures that our species is exposed to (diet, climate etc) may be different to hundreds of thousands of years ago, but that doesn't mean we aren't evolving. 'Modern' man has only been recognised as a species for a few hundred thousands of years, that isn't enough time to see big differences.
Hopefully that answers your question... but in a nutshell 'evolution doesn't simply stop', it can't.