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Charles Galton Darwin (1887–1962)

Auteur de The next million years

3+ oeuvres 55 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

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Crédit image: Sir Charles G. Darwin, Bain News Service photo portrait. Wikimedia Commons.

Œuvres de Charles Galton Darwin

The next million years (1952) 45 exemplaires
The New Conceptions of Matter (1977) 8 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

The New Scientist, 27 December 1956 (1956) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire
The New Scientist, 7 February 1957 (1957) — Book reviewer — 1 exemplaire

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A fascinating book by a Neo-Malthusian. In other words, Charles Galton Darwin, the grandson of the more famous Charles Darwin, believes that we cannot fight population growth. In the short run, birth control may help. However, in the long run -- and remember, Professor Darwin is looking at the next million years --, all we are doing is breeding humans who have steadily weaker sex drives. People with strong sex drives will have all the fun they like, but without children, thanks to improved methods of limiting births. Meanwhile, people with strong family impulses will continue to have lots of children because they like kids for their own sake. So while we may be steadily modifying our DNA (as yet undiscovered in 1952, when Darwin wrote his book), we shall not succeed in slowing population growth.

Thus, Darwin concludes that the million-year history of the human race will be much like the history of China until recently: billions of people living in poverty on the margin of starvation, and frequently falling below that margin. Occasional scientific breakthroughs will enable the human race temporarily to get ahead of population growth, thereby producing golden ages. But the word "temporarily" must be emphasized here. A grim but probable prediction.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Martin.Arbagi | Apr 15, 2015 |

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Œuvres
3
Aussi par
2
Membres
55
Popularité
#295,340
Évaluation
½ 3.3
Critiques
1
ISBN
2

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