Buck That Trend
August 23, 2010
[picapp align=”center” wrap=”false” link=”iid=9539146″ src=”http://view2.picapp.com/pictures.photo/image/9539146/michael-hall-and-his/michael-hall-and-his.jpg?size=500&imageId=9539146″ width=”380″ height=”253″ /]
We know that, in modern American society, the average intelligence of the population is declining gradually over time, probably at least partly because
- contraceptives make it easy for people to choose whether to have children (and how many)
and - Read the rest of this entry »
Posted by Chillingworth
Filed in structuralism, Theology and Living Life
Tagged: ambition, barren, Bell Curve, bucking the trend, childlessness, dysgenic pressure, family size, fertility, fulfilling career, individualism, intellectual, intelligence, Kant, marriage, merit, overpopulation, parenthood, Pew Research Center, population decline, population growth, Population Research Institute, radical individualism, successful marriage, thinking ahead, three-dimensional planning, two-dimensional planning
Tagged: ambition, barren, Bell Curve, bucking the trend, childlessness, dysgenic pressure, family size, fertility, fulfilling career, individualism, intellectual, intelligence, Kant, marriage, merit, overpopulation, parenthood, Pew Research Center, population decline, population growth, Population Research Institute, radical individualism, successful marriage, thinking ahead, three-dimensional planning, two-dimensional planning