Nick,

Last I looked, head was still on shoulders. I took your comment as just another 
caution with regard my tendency to make casual generalizations / over 
simplifications. (But now that I think about it, maybe I was a bee and you were 
a Murder Wasp? But no, we aren't in Washington state or Canada.)

But I would point out a flaw in generalizing from one kind of animal species to 
another — the male human animal encounters all kinds of constraints that 
inhibit (not prevent, just inhibit) the insemination of multiple women that 
males of other animal species usually do not.

davew


On Sun, May 3, 2020, at 1:38 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> Dave,

> 

> Didn’t mean to bite your head off. You touched an old sore. There was a huge 
> literature leading up to the sixties (Wynne-edwards, 1962, *Animal dispersion 
> in relation to Social Behavior*, *inter* *alia*) which argued that population 
> regulation was the function of social arrangements and that selection was at 
> the level of the species. This was all abruptly ended in 1966 by George C. 
> Williams’s scathing screed, *Adaptation and Natural Selection: A critique of 
> some current evolutionary thought. *Williams argued that most of our recent 
> thinking about evolutionary causation at that time had been tainted by a 
> confusion between consequences of behavior and its function, and that just 
> because population regulation was a consequence of much social behavior was 
> no reason to believe that that was its function.* * The species itself is NOT 
> an object of selection, but its consequence. Consequences to the species, as 
> such, are not an evolutionary cause. Williams’s book led to an appalling over 
> correction which continues today and may be reflected in some of the 
> libertarian-ish themes in FRIAM -- the idea that selection occurs ONLY at the 
> gene or the individual level . Trying to claw out some middle ground between 
> these two absurd extremes has been one of the stories of my life. See this 
> brief commentary. 
> <https://www.researchgate.net/publication/231784422_Reintroducing_Reintroducing_group_selection_to_the_human_behavioral_sciences_to_BBS_readers_-_Commentary>

> 

> One of the points that Williams made is that in a species such as humans, 
> killing off males cannot be seriously considered as a method for regulating 
> population since, more or less, it takes a only single male to inseminate a 
> virtually infinite number of females. Yeh, I know. “In my wildest dreams.” 
> But still.

> 

> Nick

> Nicholas Thompson

> Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

> Clark University

> [email protected]

> https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

> 

> 

> 


> *From:* Friam <[email protected]> *On Behalf Of *Prof David West
> *Sent:* Sunday, May 3, 2020 7:43 AM
> *To:* [email protected]
> *Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] ill-conceived question

> 

> Nick,

> 

> No one made any claim about effectiveness. Just an observation that if you do 
> year-by-year plot of birthrate in a given population you will see an annual 
> increase leading to the onset of a war, an obvious decrease during the war, 
> and a surge immediately after the war ends. The surge more than compensates 
> for the drop during the war years, so effectiveness is out the window.

> 

> I think — haven't checked recently — that there was a gradual increase in 
> birth rate between WWI and the onset of WWII, a 2-4 percent decrease during 
> the war years, and a huge baby boom immediately after. Father Smith had 
> similar statistical measures for dozens of other conflicts.

> 

> Population pressure / "birth control" are but one of a multitude of factors 
> that lead to war. All kinds of arguments can be made about the "validity" of 
> Father Smith's statistics — few pre-modern peoples kept comprehensive public 
> health records, ...

> 

> davew

> 

> 

> On Sat, May 2, 2020, at 11:21 PM, [email protected] wrote:

> David,

> 

> Basic fact of demography. Killing men is not a particularly effective means 
> of population control. 

> 

> You want war to serve in that capacity, you have to get women in the 
> military. 

> 

> Nick

> 

> Nicholas Thompson

> Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

> Clark University

> [email protected]

> https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

> 

> 

> 

> *From:* Friam <[email protected]> *On Behalf Of *Steven A Smith

> *Sent:* Saturday, May 2, 2020 8:00 PM

> *To:* [email protected]

> *Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] ill-conceived question

> 

> Dave -

> I once taught an honors course, with Father Smith at St. Thomas on the 
> Anthropology and Theology of War. One of the prime forces behind war — since 
> prehistory — had been nothing more than birth control.

> Do you meant literally *birth* and *control*, or rather *population* and 
> *reduction*?

> The more literal usage works well too. Controlling Births. I think much 
> warfare culminates (or did before modernish times) in the victors killing the 
> men and raping/impregnating and enslaving the women either in-place, 
> inhabiting the conquered lands or taking them back to their homeland. 
> Children alternatively would have been killed or enslaved. Thus the genetic 
> heritage of Genghis Khan...

> One step more sophisticated than the rats?

> I don't think we have to go there, no matter how much the gun hoarders want 
> their chance at being unequivocally "on top" at least for one round of the 
> grande iterated prisoner's dilemma that is human civilization.

> - Steve

> Well, in a sense that’s correct. But their method of “birth control” 
> <https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238356686_A_Utopian_perspective_on_ecology_and_development>
>  is not one that I am prepared to take as a model. Just imagine the worst 
> sort of dystopian post apocalyptic novel. See the description of the Calhoun 
> experiment on p 224.

> 

> Nick

> 

> Nicholas Thompson

> Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

> Clark University

> [email protected]

> https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

> 

> 

> 

> *From:* Friam <[email protected]> *On Behalf Of *Marcus Daniels

> *Sent:* Saturday, May 2, 2020 12:15 PM

> *To:* The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>

> *Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] ill-conceived question

> 

> < You recall that I invoked as a model that experiment in which 24 rats were 
> put in a quarter acre enclosure in Baltimore and fed and watered and 
> protected to see how the population would develop. They never got above two 
> hundred. >

> 

> Maybe the rats were right?

> * *

> Marcus

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> 

> 

> Nicholas Thompson

> Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

> Clark University

> [email protected]

> https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

> 

> 

> 

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