The Population Debate: The Development of Conflicting Theories Up to 1900Houghton Mifflin, 1967 - 466 sider |
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Side 14
... growing population . Unlike Greece , however , the Roman solution to the problem of supporting their growing population , with limited resources , was not foreign trade and emigration but war and territorial expansion . This was in ...
... growing population . Unlike Greece , however , the Roman solution to the problem of supporting their growing population , with limited resources , was not foreign trade and emigration but war and territorial expansion . This was in ...
Side 109
... growing population induces economic progress and leads to a higher form of economic organization , through the development of trade and manufactures . At the same time an increasing number of modifications and reserva- tions were being ...
... growing population induces economic progress and leads to a higher form of economic organization , through the development of trade and manufactures . At the same time an increasing number of modifications and reserva- tions were being ...
Side 184
... grow must perish , seeing that all other nations are growing from day to day . " 145 There are few if any historical periods in which this national argument did not carry considerable weight . An outstanding example of the growing use ...
... grow must perish , seeing that all other nations are growing from day to day . " 145 There are few if any historical periods in which this national argument did not carry considerable weight . An outstanding example of the growing use ...
Innhold
Fluctuation in Population Thought | 1 |
Early Population Thought | 8 |
The Rise of Population Theory in the Seventeenth | 28 |
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