Sisifo wrote:klr wrote:Other points: Once you commit your child to an extended education, you have a definite interest in dissuading them from having offspring of their own, at least until they have completed most of their education and established themselves in the workplace. The child usually has the same motivation. And of course education itself is an enormous liberating factor. Among other things, it teaches people that there is more to life than simply passing on their genes, and it would depress birth rates by that means alone.
I am afraid I don't agree at all with your two previous posts in the same basis which is that I find very arguable and
dangerously misleading the application of natural selection theories into humans. Everything I have read about it I have found it statistically inconclusive. Too many objections that make it anything more than a theory to chat with a coffee. I read Rushton's "Race, Evolution and Behavior" which uses extensively the r/K theory and it's one of the few books that I have thrown to the rubbish can. I would not donate it or give it to anyone else. I personally believe that the main factor in human evolution from the moment it gained conscience it's memes related; culture, psychology and sociology are 90% of the decition makers in our lives. Not genes, hormones and such.
And when I hear "race" I get goosepumps. Especially when I hear "black race", as if east africans and west africans would be closely related...
WTF? I didn't bring race into it at all, not even indirectly. I don't see how you make that connection from what I said

.
Of course race has nothing to do with it, but then I never said it did.
As for the suggestion that investing more in your offspring's upbringing is likely to lead to a reduction in the numbers of offspring (in combination with other factors), that pretty much stands to reason. The more effort it takes to produce something, the less of it can be produced - all other things being equal. If we create an environment that favours extended education as the key to long-term success, then expect people to modify their behaviour accordingly in the long run.
I haven't read the book in question, so I am not influenced by it in any way - good, bad or indifferent. My application of t r/K theory is based purely on my own thinking. I needn't have used it all: I could have used the basic (even abstract) economic argument which underpins it, which I've just done now.
My comment about "... passing on genes" was meant figuratively, but maybe I should have been more precise: There is more to life than getting married at a young age and having a substantial family.
Sisifo wrote:
Going to your points, I doubt that education reduces natality because "teaches better things to do in life".
You don't get an education, you don't realise what you could do in life - let alone have the wherewithal to actually do it.
Sisifo wrote:
Education first of all reduces the fertility period 10 years (15-25); ten less years to reproduce.
Which I clearly implied.
Sisifo wrote:
Secondly, education leads to advance the consequences of acts, and thirdly education provides professions, that are usually alternatives to a family life.
Which is also part of the point that I was making when I said "... teaches better things to do in life". It looks to me as if you've just supported it, despite your dismissal of it earlier.
Sisifo wrote:
In that sense, I doubt that any parent would believe that sending the children to school would guarantee better retirement. Mostly, the better the education of the children, the most likely that the parents would end in an asylum.
Since most parents of well-educated children do not in fact end up in an asylum (or belong there regardless), that point is simply not true. What evidence is there to support a hypothesis that level of offspring education and parental sanity are in any way inversely linked?

God has no place within these walls, just like facts have no place within organized religion. - Superintendent Chalmers
It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson
