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what's the Tipping Point?
An Ark, a Submarine or a SpaceShip?
Hmm...no Optimistic replies.I do Not expect issues like Climate Change or Global Warming to be Resolved any time soon, Well not in this Century atleast.Seems like We are tip toeing towards Doomsday!
Air conditioning gives me headaches.
, i can go without food & water for days, but i won't last long.
This is a characteristic of non-linear systems.
Uhm, I don't see why, but your theory appealed to me)
Quote from: EricNewman on 11/11/2022 16:10:07Uhm, I don't see why, but your theory appealed to me)You can divide Western society into three cohorts. Age 0 - 20, they generally consume goods and services provided by the "working fraction" who pay taxes and build pension funds.Age 20 - 60 is the working fraction, who produce goods, services and wealthAge 60 - 100 is the retired group, with numbers at each age declining roughly linearly, and consuming goods, services and the benefits of the pensions they have paid for. Consider a stable state. If every woman bears two children at the age of 20 (we're talking rough statistics, not biology!) there are equal numbers in the 0 - 20 and 60 - 100 cohort, and the total equals the number in the 20 - 60 group Thus the present working fraction is about 0.5, supporting the other half of the population. If we now restrict reproduction to one child per female, the 0 - 20 cohort decreases and the working fraction increases gradually from 0.5 to about 0.6. We thus have more goods, services and wealth to spend on fewer consumers (child and adolescent service providers can be reassigned to support the elderly). If you maintain the one child limit for 100 years, the residual population will be about one tenth of the starting value, still occupying the same area and thus with 10 times the natural resources and amenities per capita, plus the accrued benefits of the intervening period of increased per capita production and investment. Around this point, you can revert to a 2-child norm and stabilise the population. A population of around 10,000,000 can live completely sustainably at a very high standard of comfort within the British Isles.