Historical Notes

避孕

错综复杂的问题

历史记载

托马斯马尔萨斯
1766-1834
反对人口过剩的早期预警者
Thomas Malthus
(1766-1834)
An early warner against overpopulation.

人口统计学家将人类人口生产(fertility和人类生育力(fecundity作了区分。术语人口生产在此定义为人口真实出生的数量,而生育力定义为潜在的人口生产能力。显而易见,人口生产从未赶上过生育力,或换一句话说,人类的人口生产从未实现过其生育的全部潜能。

限制人口出生不仅对于像部落或民族这样的群体,而且对于个别的家庭都是普遍的做法。人们总是设法用各种各样的方法限制其孩子的数量。其中的方法是禁止早婚、把两性分隔开来、严格遵从贞洁和独身的生活方式、避孕、流产和杀婴等。

限制人口的规模一度成为学术争论的主题,尤其是经由英国牧师托马斯马尔萨斯发表其论文后,更是人们争论的焦点了。在马尔萨斯的人口原理评论1798)论文中,他推测,由于食物的供给只能以算术级数(12345等)增加,而人口将会以几何级数(124816等)增长,世界人口将最终超过食物的供给而难以得到供养。就这一特别人口学观点,人们最终证明马尔萨斯并不正确。可是,他的其他许多悲观的调查报告日益激起了延续至今的诡异的辩论。甚至于他现在被认为是资本主义社会中讽剌政治经济学之父。

Contraception

A Complex Issue

Historical Notes

Demographers distinguish between human fertility and human fecundity. The word “fertility” refers here to the number of actual births while “fecundity” refers to potential births. Obviously, fertility has never matched fecundity or, in other words, no human population has ever reproduced to its full capacity.

This is generally true not only for groups such as tribes or nations, but also for individual families. People have always tried to limit the number of their children by various methods. Among those were prohibitions of early marriage, separation of the sexes,  a high esteem for chaste and celibate lifestyles, contraception, abortion, and infanticide.

Limiting the size of populations became a topic for learned disputes especially through the work of the English parson Thomas Malthus. In his “Essay in the Principle of Population” (1798) he speculated that the growth of the world population would eventually outrun the world food supply because the latter could only grow at an arithmetic rate (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc.) while the population would grow at a geometric rate (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, etc.). In this particular instance, Malthus was eventually proven wrong. However, many of his other gloomy observations have stimulated an increasingly sophisticated debate that continues to this day. Indeed, he is now considered the father of  “the dismal science” of economics.

[Course 2] [Description] [How to use it] [Introduction] [Conception] [Pregnancy] [Birth] [Infertility] [Contraception] [A Complex Issue] [Methods of Contracep.] [Abortion] [Additional Reading] [Examination]