PodParley PodParley

Phillip Longman: The Depopulation Problem

An episode of the Long Now podcast, hosted by The Long Now Foundation, titled "Phillip Longman: The Depopulation Problem" was published on August 14, 2004 and runs 61 minutes.

August 14, 2004 ·61m · Long Now

0:00 / 0:00
### The depopulation problem Full PDF of the talk [here](http://static.longnow.org/seminars/020040813-longman/salt-020040813-longman.pdf "PDF"), slideshow [here](https://media.longnow.org/salt-slides/Longman.html "The Depopulation Problem"). No need to summarize this time. Phillip Longman wrote out his whole talk, with the illustrations more viewable even than they were at the Seminar and talk. (excerpt below) It is full of rethink-the-news sentences like: "Notice that Japan's lengthening recession began just as continuously falling fertility rates at last caused its working-age population to begin shrinking in relative size." One thing worth adding from the Q&A at Phil's public lecture August 13th. Kevin Kelly asked him what he thought the world might feel like in 100 years. "People a century from now will have so few blood relatives I think it could be very lonely." The audience, convinced by then, was utterly still. Excerpt from Longman's talk: "So where will the children of the future come from? Some biologists speculate that modern human beings have created an environment in which the “fittest”, or most successful, individuals are precisely those who have few, if any, offspring. As more and more humans find themselves living under conditions in which children have become costly impediments to success, those who are well adapted to this new environment will tend not to reproduce themselves. And many others who are not so successful will imitate them. But this hardly implies extinction. Some people will still have children. They just won’t be people highly motivated by material concerns or secular values. Disproportionately, the parents of the future will be people who are at odds with the modern environment – people who either “don’t get” the new rules of the game that make large families a liability or who, out of religious or chauvinistic conviction, reject the game altogether. In short people like Mormons. "
Long Now Boston True Spectrum Media Long Now Boston fosters long-term thinking on the local and global level. We want to become a critical resource connecting the region’s domains of technology, arts, culture, commerce, science, and environmentalism. We encourage individual and collective responsibility in a time-scale of the next ten thousand years, and offer tools and resources to our future leaders. Lords of Grantham: Bridgerton, Downton Abbey & More Lords of Grantham Period dramas broken down by Americans. The Gilded Age, Downton Abbey, Bridgerton, The Buccaneers and more. It won’t be long now. HOW LONG IS NOW CUBO Teatro HOW LONG IS NOW è una installazione nella cornice di Cubo Teatro, costruita attraverso le memorie delle opere prodotte negli ultimi anni da Cubo Teatro e dal progetto Parsec. I podcast, invece, sono tratti dal Teatro Decomposto o L’Uomo Pattumiera di Matei Visniec e sonoprodotti del progetto Theatre On Call, realizzato durante lockdown con l’interpretazione di JacopoCrovella, Dalila Reas, AnnamHOW LONG IS NOW è un progetto di Cubo Teatro e Off Topic, in collaborazione con Fertili Terreni Teatro, TYC-Torino Youth Centre e con il sostegno del Comune di Torino e della Compagnia di San Paolo. Anime Topic D.Grey-Man! Megan Moser I’ve loved Anime for a long time now. “The darkness has come so when does the light come?” that is what I think when something bad happens to an important character. I love D.Grey-Man, the beautiful story line, and the beautiful character's that is why I love D.grey-Man! I’ve Watched the Anime more times than I can count, and I’m reading the Manga, right now I’m on book seven. The Manga comes out every three or six months.
URL copied to clipboard!