Sand Dancer
Currently catless
Okay then, maybe the author is FOS.Evolution is biological. Acquisition of knowledge has biological value. There’s no need to split its effects from the rest of what makes an animal species thrive.
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Okay then, maybe the author is FOS.Evolution is biological. Acquisition of knowledge has biological value. There’s no need to split its effects from the rest of what makes an animal species thrive.
I understand the xenophobia of US Americans. After all, the new immigrants could be as bad as the immigrants that were their ancestors. And the children of the new immigrants could be as bad as current US Americans.Why? Surely it is more elegant by far that we solve our chronic labour shortage by giving a hand up to people from poorer places? What's the harm in that?
Or to the year 1945. Just like geologists can detect the K-T boundary by Iridium traces after 65 million years, future geologists will be able to detect the Anthropocene by the transuranic elements we leave behind.From the perspective of an ecologist, not at all. The world is interconnected, particularly global ecosystems and ecosystem services. The impact of humans is global, and some scientists have taken to calling the present era the "anthropocene" for precisely this reason. IIRC current proposals are putting the start of it right around when human population started to skyrocket (along with human impacts). Other proposals suggest placing the start of the anthropocene somewhere around the development of agriculture.
Well it was just an idle thought, and not meant to be taken that seriously. But given that we, as humans overall, seem to be less inclined towards socialism, and where the wealth gap seems to continually increase, perhaps such a suggestion might come forward from certain areas of the population in the future.When a species become overpopulated, the signs and symptoms resolve the problem without any need for intervention. Humanity's constant meddling is what got it and the rest of the biosphere into this sixth mass extinction event to begin with. There is no need to overthink any of this and come up with solutions. The solutions already exist and are already being deployed by inherent limits in nature. There is no need to do anything at all. Some humans simply believe they should do something or want to do something.
As far as that conversation goes, with the P factor one either throttles birth rates or death rates, and there are many, many ways to do that. Paying humans to die is possibly one of the least viable death rate throttles I've heard of and its a cultural non-starter. I don't blame some others in this thread for calling that out as nonsense.
Well it was just an idle thought, and not meant to be taken that seriously. But given that we, as humans overall, seem to be less inclined towards socialism, and where the wealth gap seems to continually increase, perhaps such a suggestion might come forward from certain areas of the population in the future.
"Overpopulation" isn't the issue, and is really only ever the jump-point into eugenics.
You're joking, right?That is, if the population does become a strain on (Earth) resources and might lead to calamity (in the future), should we offer inducements (financial or otherwise, and which might benefit relatives or others) for those who might want to end their lives, for whatever reasons?
Please discuss.
No, we really don't. Else people who live below the poverty line would not be having children, and yet they are. It is not only college graduates with "successful" careers that have children.Modern society, in seeming to now require a college education and subsequent successful career to allow one to reproduce
No, we really don't. Else people who live below the poverty line would not be having children, and yet they are. It is not only college graduates with "successful" careers that have children.
Well at least you didn't go off on a rant.You're joking, right?
Correct, I do not think that. In fact, I would say that it's encouraged for low-wage, non-graduate people, despite the challenges that come with it.You don't think it's discouraged at all in modern society, for non-college educated people to reproduce?