Friday, October 25, 2019
The Population Solution :: essays research papers fc
 The Population Solution      Question... 1. Most people assume that human numbers will stabilize at some  point in the future. Discuss the conditions which can contribute to the solution  of the population explosion.    "Let us suppose that the average human being weighs 60 kilogram's. If  that's the case then 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 people would weigh as much as  the whole Earth does. That number of people is 30,000,000,000,000 times as many  people as there are living today. It may seem to you that the population can go  up a long, long time before it reaches the point where there are  30,000,000,000,000 times as many people as there are today. Let's think about  that though. Let us suppose that the population growth rate stays at 2.0 per  cent so that the number of people in the world continues to double every 35  years. How long, then, will it take for the world's population to weigh as much  as the entire planet? The answer is - not quite 1,600 years. This means that by  3550 AD, the human population would weight as much as the entire planet.... Even  if that were possible, it wouldn't give us much time. If the growth-rate stays  at 2.0 per cent, then in a little over 2,200 years - say, by 4220 AD - the human  populat i on would weigh as much as the entire Solar system, including the Sun...  and by about 6700 AD - the human population would weigh as much as the entire  Universe." The preceding paragraph, by Isaac Asimov describes quite alarmingly  just how bad the population problem really is, that in considerably less time  that has passed since the days of Julius Caesar the population will equal in  mass of that of the earth. Most people assume that human numbers will stabilize  at some point in the future. Hopefully it will, but not without conditions that  will contribute to the solution of the population explosion, conditions which  include education, birth control methods and government action.         Although not the largest in terms of population size,     Kenya has one of  the highest rates natural increase in the world. This rapid growth rate, which  is predicted to reach 120 million by the year 2050, is primarily due to high  birthrates and low death rates. Alarmingly, more than half of its population is  under the age of 15. This is partly due to the fact that before western  influence, health care was relatively poor and families needed to be large in  order to guarantee the survival of at least a couple of children to take care of  both the land and the elderly.  					    
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