The Psych blog The Human Beast had an interesting take that's relevant
to the discussion.

Is the Family Doomed?

By Nigel Barber, Ph.D.
Created Jan 3 2013 - 12:44pm
If you had a trying time with your relatives this holiday season, the
news is good. Such gatherings will soon be a faint memory according to
sociologist Joel Cotkin in a new report “The Rise of Post-familism
(1).”

What is post-familism?

Ever since the Stone Age, married couples and their children were the
building block of all societies. In post-familism, most young people
opt not to marry. Even if they marry, many opt not to have children.
So families with children is no longer the most common type of
household.

These simple changes transform societies based upon the family unit to
networks of individuals who come together for companionship, for
entertainment, and to cope with practical problems. The model is the
urban bohemian communities that sprang up in cities a century ago with
a rejection of conventional family life and an emphasis on personal
growth and fulfillment.

Post-familism is of great concern to demographers who foresee some
very bad consequences extending far into the future. Chief of these
are exceptionally low birth rates and an unprecedented aging of the
population. This is bad because it means that the population will have
much more elderly people. There will be fewer people of peak working
age.

So the entire world population begins to look more like Japan with its
rapidly aging population, high dependency ratio, and stagnant economy.
Cotkin’s report (1) is most interesting in its identification of
possible causes.

Causes of post-familism

One key factor is prosperity. Family groups, and kin networks more
generally are partly a reflection of the difficulty of making a living
alone. In prosperous societies, healthy well-paid individuals can look
out for themselves. This is particularly true in social democracies
where basic health and survival needs are protected by government
safety nets.

Prosperity also brings more job opportunities for women who enjoy
greater job opportunities in modern service economies where physical
strength is no longer an advantage. Contemporary women are
out-competing men in third-level education and occupationally
successful women often delay marriage and childbearing as hindering
their careers.

Urbanization of the population is another key trend. The high
population density in cities is adverse to child bearing for numerous
reasons, including the high cost of living space, and risks to
children from high crime rates. Even schools tend to be bad in large
cities (1) and that is particularly true of public schools.

In effect, young people have a choice between remaining in the city
with all the personal, and occupational advantages this brings, or
moving to cheaper suburbs where they can afford to raise children.

Even the bad economic times the developed world is currently
experiencing mean that marriage and child bearing are delayed due to
hesitation about taking on the financial burden of a family.

Cotkin, of Chapman University, believes that the worldwide decline in
religion is also a cause of the decline in conventional families on
the assumption that religion bolsters family values . This is
questionable. In my recent book “Why Atheism Will Replace Religion
(2)” I argue that the decline in religion and the decline in fertility
are both caused by economic development.

Is it really all about values?

Having outlined the many practical influences that work against
families, Cotkin concludes, incongruously in my opinion, that the
future of families is really a matter of what people want to do to
protect families. This frustrating tendency to shift from credible
scientific explanations to unsatisfactory ones that are circular, or
moralistic, is unfortunately common and reflects theoretical
weaknesses in sociology (3).

The brave new world of post-familism is a fascinating problem for
social scientists, including evolutionary scholars like myself. Will
we diverge forever into Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World of unrelated
individuals where families are disreputable? Or will we cling to
marriage and the family that saved our hides up to this point? Either
way, we are learning much about what it means to be human.



1. Cotkin, J. (2012). The rise of post-familism. Singapore: Civil
Service College.

2. Barber, N. (2012). Why atheism will replace religion: The triumph
of earthly pleasures over pie in the sky. E-book, available at:
http://www.amazon.com/Atheism-Will-Replace-Religion-ebook/dp/B008...

3. Barber, N. (2008). The myth of culture: Why we need a genuine
natural science of societies. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars
Press.

Source URL: http://www.psychologytoday.com/node/114806


On Sat, Dec 15, 2012 at 9:14 AM, Jerry Barnes <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Before the shooting happened, I saw this headline:
>
> Fight over pizza ends in near drowning in dog's water
> bowl<http://www.cfnews13.com/content/news/cfnews13/news/article.html/content/news/articles/cfn/2012/12/14/pizza_fight_volusia_.html>
>
> Upon seeing this, I thought about how far morality has fallen in or
> country.  I wondered if the country could fall any further into depravity.
>  Unfortunately, the answer was yes.
>
> I felt physically sick upon hearing the details of the shooting.  It's is
> absolutely heart breaking and emotionally devastating for me.  I can't
> imagine the pain the families are enduring.
>
> Some pundits keep preaching the demise of the USA.  With the rise of moral
> relativism, no personal accountability, and the culture of blame, that is
> prevalent in the US, they may be right.


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