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Progress, poverty, and populationProgress, poverty, and population

Progress, poverty, and population1977

John Avery

About this book

Are poverty, misery, famine, disease and war inevitably part of the human condition? Will the creations of science become uncontrollable and socially dangerous, like Frankenstein's monster? Or can science and education create a world of material plenty - a war-free world, where the benevolent, creative and intellectual sides of human nature will have a chance to flourish? This book tries to answer these questions by tracing the history of a debate which took place among the economists, political philosophers and writers of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. It was a debate in which the Utopian vision of optimists such as the Marquis de Condorcet and William Godwin was opposed by Thomas Robert Malthus and others, who believed that the benefits of scientific progress would inevitably be nullified by the growth of the global population. This book follows that debate, which also involved people such as Burke, Paine, Wollstonecraft, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Shelley, Byron, Ricardo, Mill and Darwin. In the final chapter, the question of who was right is examined from the vantage-point of our own times, while particular attention is given to the close connection between population pressure and war.

Details

First published
1977
OL Work ID
OL2701784W

Subjects

ProgressMalthusianismCondorcet, jean-antoine-nicolas de caritat, marquis de, 1743-1794Godwin, william, 1756-1836Malthus, t. r. (thomas robert), 1766-1834PopulationPopulation GrowthWarfarePopulation DynamicsProgrèsMalthusianismeAccroissementAccroissement de populationAnalyse comparativeDéveloppement économiqueHistoirePhilosophieArmut

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