Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
[view all posts]
[view all posts]
The section, Globalization Leads to Slavery, seems to me to contain a view point applicable to our
times, though not as yet brought to its intended ends.
A Darwin's Look into The Next Million Years
The Next Million Years Part 1
Brent Jessop - Knowledge Driven Revolution.com
March 3, 2008
Charles Galton Darwin's 1952 book The Next Million Years [1] attempts to give a general
outline of
the "future history" of mankind by using the "law of human nature". C.G. Darwin (1887-1962) was
an English physicist and grandson of Charles Darwin of evolutionary fame. Despite being concerned
about the over-population of the world he had four sons and one daughter with his wife Katharine
Pember. The hypocrisy of this may seem odd, but the concern about over-population only refers to
inferior breeds of humans and not superior breeds like himself and his lineage. C.G. Darwin was a
long time member and eventual president of the Eugenic Society (1953-59) which represented the
belief system held among many of the political, scientific and aristocratic elites of his day and the
present.
Why the Next Million Years?
This article will examine some of C.G. Darwin's views of what the next million years of
mankind's
future history will look like. But first, why such a enormous length of a million years of future
history?
From The Next Million Years:
"... in the evolution of life, how long does it take to make a new species? The answer is a
million
years. That is the reason for the title I have chosen for this essay - for a million years to come we
have got to put up with all the defects in man's nature as it is now." - 78
The Laws of Human Nature
"Nevertheless for all of us it is intolerable to think of the future unfolding itself in complete
predestined inevitability for the eternity of a million years. There are two things we must do; one is
to know, the other to act. As to knowing, in my introductory chapter I described an analogy in
mechanics, and I suggested that it should be possible to discover a set of laws, like the laws of
thermodynamics, which would place absolute limits on what can be done by humanity. Biological
laws cannot be expected to have the same hard outline as physical laws, but still there are absolute
laws limiting what an animal can do, and similar laws will limit man not only on his physical side,
but also on his intellectual side. If these could be clearly stated, we should recognize that many
attempts that have been made at improving man's estate were hopeless.
It is for others, better versed than I am in the biological sciences, to work out these laws, and
it is in
all humility that I put forward the basis, on which, it may be, that they could be founded. The first
principle is that man, as an animal, obeys the law of variation of species, which condemns human
nature to stay nearly constant for a million years. The perfectibility of mankind, the aim of so many
noble spirits, is foredoomed by this principle. The second is that man is a wild animal, and that
doctrines drawn from the observation of domestic animals are quite inapplicable to him. The third
principle is the non-inheritance of acquired characters, a principle familiar in animal biology, but
all too seldom invoked in connection with human beings. If these, and any further principles as
well, or any alternatives to them, were accepted, it might sometimes be possible through them to
show up the absurdities of bad statesmanship, and certainly it would be the part of a wise
statesman to work within their limitations, because only so could he hope to achieve success."
[emphasis mine] - 206
"A history of the future is different from a history of the past, because it cannot in any sense
be a
narrative. It cannot say what will happen in anything like the same manner as past history says
what did happen. All it can do is to say what things will be happening most of the time and in most
places, but without being able to specify those times and those places. This it does through
consideration of the laws of nature, chief among which is the law of human nature." [emphasis
mine] - 167
The Need to Change Human Nature
As a avid eugenicist, C. G. Darwin believed "improvements" in the human species could only
come
about through the changing of mankind's hereditary nature.
"But there is also the possibility of an internal revolution. This would come about if means
were
discovered of deliberately altering human nature itself... here it must suffice to say that the
prospects do not seem at all good. There is first the extreme difficulty of making such changes, and
the probability that most of them would be for the worse, and secondly, if by chance a
revolutionary improvement should arise, it seems all too likely that the rest of mankind would not
tolerate the supermen and would destroy them before ever they had the time to multiply. It is
mainly the belief that there will be no revolutionary change in human nature that emboldened me
to write this essay." [emphasis mine] - 56
"Still for the sake of the distant future something can be attempted more profitable than has
been
usual hitherto. Attempts at improving the lot of mankind have all hitherto been directed toward
improving his conditions, but not his nature, and as soon as the conditions lapse all is lost. The only
hope is to use our knowledge of biology in such a way that all would not be lost with the lapse of
the conditions. The principles of heredity offer an anchor which will permanently fix any gains that
there may be in the quality of mankind." [emphasis mine] - 208
"If the history of the future is not regarded as the automatic unfolding of a sequence of
uncontrollable events - and few, of us would accept this inevitability - then anyone who has
decided what measures are desirable for the permanent betterment of his fellows will naturally have
to consider what is the best method of carrying his policy through. There are three levels at which
he might work. The first and weakest is by direct conscious political action; his policy is likely to die
with him and so to be ineffective. The second is by the creation of a creed, since this has the
prospect of lasting for quite a number of generations, so that there is some prospect of really
changing the world a little with it. The third would be by directly changing man's nature, working
through the laws of biological heredity, and if this could be done for long enough it would be really
effective. But even if we knew all about man's genes, which we certainly do not, a policy of this kind
would be almost impossible to enforce even for a short time, and, since it would take many
generations to carry it through, it would almost certainly be dropped long before any perceptive
effects were achieved." [emphasis in original] - 114
The Structure and Function of Government
What will the future structure and function of government be during the next million years?
"If transportation is easy, world conquest will be easier both for military reasons and because
the
more uniform culture should make the world government more acceptable." [emphasis mine] - 193
"Widespread wealth can never be common in an overcrowded world, and so in most countries
of the
future the government will inevitably be autocratic or oligarchic; some will give good government
and some bad, and the goodness or badness will depend much more on the personal merits of the
rulers than it does in a more democratic country." - 194
"Whatever forms the government may take, there can be little doubt that the world will
spontaneously divide itself into what I shall call provinces, that is to say regions, though with no
permanently fixed boundaries, which possess some homogeneity of climate, character and
interests. I use the same word whether the different provinces are federated together, or whether
they are what we should now call separate sovereign states. How large will these provinces tend to
be? That will depend on the means of communication and transport, and so once again there arises
the question of whether the fuel problem is solved wholly or partially or not at all. In the past the
chief means of communication was the horse, and the countries of Europe are still mostly of a size
adopted to suit this almost extinct means of transport, though some of the more newly formed
ones do show a trace of the influence of the railway. None of them are really of a size suited to the
motor-car or the aeroplane, or to present power production, whether by coal or water-power,
which cuts right across the national boundaries.
If the fuel problem is solved completely, so that mechanical power and transportation is
available in
the future to a greater extent even than at present, then the provinces will be large; for example,
the whole of Europe may well be one, and the whole of North America another...
Consider next what are likely to be usual relations between the provinces. It is too much to
expect
that there can ever be a permanent world government benevolently treating all of them on a perfect
equality; such an institution could only work during the rare occasions of a world-wide golden age.
To think of it as possible at other times is a misunderstanding of the function of government in any
practical sense of the term. If the only things that a government was required to do were what
everybody, or nearly everybody, wanted, there would be no need for the government to exist at all,
because the things would be done anyhow; this would be the impracticable ideal of the anarchist.
But if there are to be starving margins of population in most parts of the world, mere benevolence
cannot suffice. There would inevitably be ill feeling and jealousy between the provinces, with each
believing that it was not getting its fair share of the good things, and in fact, it would be like the
state of affairs with which we are all too familiar. If then there is ever to be a world government, it
will have to function as government do now, in the sense that it will have to coerce a minority - and
indeed it may often be a majority - into doing things they do not want to do." [emphasis mine] -
191
Civilization and a Universal Culture of Science
"Civilization might, loosely speaking, be counted as a sort of domestication, in that it imposes
on
man conditions not at all typical of wild life." - 115
"Civilization has taught man how to live in dense crowds, and by that very fact those crowds
are
likely ultimately to constitute a majority of the world's population. Already there are many who
prefer this crowded life, but there are others who do not, and these will gradually be eliminated.
Life in the crowded conditions of cities has many unattractive features, but in the long run these
may be overcome, not so much by altering them, but simply by changing the human race into liking
them." [emphasis mine] - 99
"To conclude, I have cited the past history of China as furnishing the type of an enduring
civilization. It seems to provide a model to which the future history of the world may be expected
broadly to conform. The scale will of course be altogether vaster, and the variety of happenings
cannot by any means be foreseen, but I believe that the underlying ground theme can be foreseen
and that in a general way it will be rather like the history of the Chinese Empire. The regions of the
world most of the time will be competing against one another. Occasionally - more rarely, than has
been the case in China - they will be united by some strong arm into an uneasy world-government,
which will endure for a period until it falls by the inevitable decay that finally destroys all dynasties.
There will be periods when some of the provinces relapse into barbarism, but all the time
civilization will survive in some of them. It will survive because it will be based on a single universal
culture, derived from the understanding of science; for it is only through this understanding that
the multitudes can continue to live. On this basic culture there will be overlaid other cultures, often
possessing a greater emotional appeal, which will vary according to climate and race from one
province to another. Most of the time and over most of the earth there will be severe pressure from
excess populations, and there will be periodic famines. There will be a consequent callousness
about the value of the individual's life, and often there will be cruelty to a degree of which we do
not willingly think. This however is only one side of the history. On the other side there will be vast
stores of learning, far beyond anything we can now imagine, and the intellectual stature of man will
rise to ever higher levels. And sometimes new discoveries will for a time relieve the human race
from its fears, and there will be golden ages, when man may for a time be free to create wonderful
flowerings in science, philosophy and the arts." [emphasis mine] - 203
Globalization Leads to Slavery
"As to the less successful members, the standard of living of any community living on its real
earnings, as the communities of the future will have to do, is inevitably lower than that of one
rapidly spending the savings of hundreds of millions of years as we are doing now. There will also
be the frequent threat of starvation, which will operate against the least efficient members of every
community with special force, so that it may be expected that the conditions of their work will be
much more severe than at present. Even now we see that a low standard of living in one country
has the advantage in competing against a high standard in another. If there is work to be done,
and, of two men of equal quality, one is willing to do it for less pay than the other, in the long run it
will be he who gets the work to do. Those who find the bad conditions supportable will be willing
to work harder and for less reward; in a broad sense of the term they are more efficient than the
others, because they get more done for less pay. There are of course many exceptions, for real skill
will get its reward, but in the long run it is inevitable that the lower types of labour will have an
exceedingly precarious life. One of the triumphs of our own golden age has been that slavery has
been abolished over a great part of the earth. It is difficult to see how this condition can be
maintained in the hard world of the future with its starving margins, and it is too be feared that all
too often a fraction of humanity will have to live in a state which, whatever it may be called, will be
indistinguishable from slavery." [emphasis mine] - 189
Computers To Predict the Near Future
"I am imagining that some new discovery should make the process far more precise for short-
term
planning. This might come about, for example, through the use of new high-speed counting
machines, which in a short space of time might explore the consequences of alternative policies
with a completeness that is far beyond anything that the human mind can aspire to achieve
directly." - 55
A program currently underway at the Pentagon called the Sentient World Simulation attempts to do
just that. From an article by Mark Baard:
"U.S defense, intel and homeland security officials are constructing a parallel world, on a
computer,
which the agencies will use to test propaganda messages and military strategies."
"Called the Sentient World Simulation, the program uses AI routines based upon the
psychological
theories of Marty Seligman, among others. (Seligman introduced the theory of "learned
helplessness" in the 1960s, after shocking beagles until they cowered, urinating, on the bottom of
their cages.)"
"Yank a country's water supply. Stage a military coup. SWS will tell you what happens next."
"The sim will feature an AR avatar for each person in the real world, based upon data collected
about us from government records and the internet."
Conclusion
The next part in this series will examine C. G. Darwin's views on the possibility of
domesticating
the whole of mankind. Part 3 will look into the importance of creeds on the future history of
mankind. The second last part in this series will examine C. G. Darwin's emphasis on the
desirability of eugenics and ways of perpetuating "superior" genes in future generations. Finally, I
will examine the difficulties in controlling the size of the world population as described in The Next
Million Years.
[1] Quotes from Charles Galton Darwin, The Next Million Years (1952).
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
The section, Globalization Leads to Slavery, seems to me to contain a view point applicable to our
times, though not as yet brought to its intended ends.
A Darwin's Look into The Next Million Years
The Next Million Years Part 1
Brent Jessop - Knowledge Driven Revolution.com
March 3, 2008
Charles Galton Darwin's 1952 book The Next Million Years [1] attempts to give a general
outline of
the "future history" of mankind by using the "law of human nature". C.G. Darwin (1887-1962) was
an English physicist and grandson of Charles Darwin of evolutionary fame. Despite being concerned
about the over-population of the world he had four sons and one daughter with his wife Katharine
Pember. The hypocrisy of this may seem odd, but the concern about over-population only refers to
inferior breeds of humans and not superior breeds like himself and his lineage. C.G. Darwin was a
long time member and eventual president of the Eugenic Society (1953-59) which represented the
belief system held among many of the political, scientific and aristocratic elites of his day and the
present.
Why the Next Million Years?
This article will examine some of C.G. Darwin's views of what the next million years of
mankind's
future history will look like. But first, why such a enormous length of a million years of future
history?
From The Next Million Years:
"... in the evolution of life, how long does it take to make a new species? The answer is a
million
years. That is the reason for the title I have chosen for this essay - for a million years to come we
have got to put up with all the defects in man's nature as it is now." - 78
The Laws of Human Nature
"Nevertheless for all of us it is intolerable to think of the future unfolding itself in complete
predestined inevitability for the eternity of a million years. There are two things we must do; one is
to know, the other to act. As to knowing, in my introductory chapter I described an analogy in
mechanics, and I suggested that it should be possible to discover a set of laws, like the laws of
thermodynamics, which would place absolute limits on what can be done by humanity. Biological
laws cannot be expected to have the same hard outline as physical laws, but still there are absolute
laws limiting what an animal can do, and similar laws will limit man not only on his physical side,
but also on his intellectual side. If these could be clearly stated, we should recognize that many
attempts that have been made at improving man's estate were hopeless.
It is for others, better versed than I am in the biological sciences, to work out these laws, and
it is in
all humility that I put forward the basis, on which, it may be, that they could be founded. The first
principle is that man, as an animal, obeys the law of variation of species, which condemns human
nature to stay nearly constant for a million years. The perfectibility of mankind, the aim of so many
noble spirits, is foredoomed by this principle. The second is that man is a wild animal, and that
doctrines drawn from the observation of domestic animals are quite inapplicable to him. The third
principle is the non-inheritance of acquired characters, a principle familiar in animal biology, but
all too seldom invoked in connection with human beings. If these, and any further principles as
well, or any alternatives to them, were accepted, it might sometimes be possible through them to
show up the absurdities of bad statesmanship, and certainly it would be the part of a wise
statesman to work within their limitations, because only so could he hope to achieve success."
[emphasis mine] - 206
"A history of the future is different from a history of the past, because it cannot in any sense
be a
narrative. It cannot say what will happen in anything like the same manner as past history says
what did happen. All it can do is to say what things will be happening most of the time and in most
places, but without being able to specify those times and those places. This it does through
consideration of the laws of nature, chief among which is the law of human nature." [emphasis
mine] - 167
The Need to Change Human Nature
As a avid eugenicist, C. G. Darwin believed "improvements" in the human species could only
come
about through the changing of mankind's hereditary nature.
"But there is also the possibility of an internal revolution. This would come about if means
were
discovered of deliberately altering human nature itself... here it must suffice to say that the
prospects do not seem at all good. There is first the extreme difficulty of making such changes, and
the probability that most of them would be for the worse, and secondly, if by chance a
revolutionary improvement should arise, it seems all too likely that the rest of mankind would not
tolerate the supermen and would destroy them before ever they had the time to multiply. It is
mainly the belief that there will be no revolutionary change in human nature that emboldened me
to write this essay." [emphasis mine] - 56
"Still for the sake of the distant future something can be attempted more profitable than has
been
usual hitherto. Attempts at improving the lot of mankind have all hitherto been directed toward
improving his conditions, but not his nature, and as soon as the conditions lapse all is lost. The only
hope is to use our knowledge of biology in such a way that all would not be lost with the lapse of
the conditions. The principles of heredity offer an anchor which will permanently fix any gains that
there may be in the quality of mankind." [emphasis mine] - 208
"If the history of the future is not regarded as the automatic unfolding of a sequence of
uncontrollable events - and few, of us would accept this inevitability - then anyone who has
decided what measures are desirable for the permanent betterment of his fellows will naturally have
to consider what is the best method of carrying his policy through. There are three levels at which
he might work. The first and weakest is by direct conscious political action; his policy is likely to die
with him and so to be ineffective. The second is by the creation of a creed, since this has the
prospect of lasting for quite a number of generations, so that there is some prospect of really
changing the world a little with it. The third would be by directly changing man's nature, working
through the laws of biological heredity, and if this could be done for long enough it would be really
effective. But even if we knew all about man's genes, which we certainly do not, a policy of this kind
would be almost impossible to enforce even for a short time, and, since it would take many
generations to carry it through, it would almost certainly be dropped long before any perceptive
effects were achieved." [emphasis in original] - 114
The Structure and Function of Government
What will the future structure and function of government be during the next million years?
"If transportation is easy, world conquest will be easier both for military reasons and because
the
more uniform culture should make the world government more acceptable." [emphasis mine] - 193
"Widespread wealth can never be common in an overcrowded world, and so in most countries
of the
future the government will inevitably be autocratic or oligarchic; some will give good government
and some bad, and the goodness or badness will depend much more on the personal merits of the
rulers than it does in a more democratic country." - 194
"Whatever forms the government may take, there can be little doubt that the world will
spontaneously divide itself into what I shall call provinces, that is to say regions, though with no
permanently fixed boundaries, which possess some homogeneity of climate, character and
interests. I use the same word whether the different provinces are federated together, or whether
they are what we should now call separate sovereign states. How large will these provinces tend to
be? That will depend on the means of communication and transport, and so once again there arises
the question of whether the fuel problem is solved wholly or partially or not at all. In the past the
chief means of communication was the horse, and the countries of Europe are still mostly of a size
adopted to suit this almost extinct means of transport, though some of the more newly formed
ones do show a trace of the influence of the railway. None of them are really of a size suited to the
motor-car or the aeroplane, or to present power production, whether by coal or water-power,
which cuts right across the national boundaries.
If the fuel problem is solved completely, so that mechanical power and transportation is
available in
the future to a greater extent even than at present, then the provinces will be large; for example,
the whole of Europe may well be one, and the whole of North America another...
Consider next what are likely to be usual relations between the provinces. It is too much to
expect
that there can ever be a permanent world government benevolently treating all of them on a perfect
equality; such an institution could only work during the rare occasions of a world-wide golden age.
To think of it as possible at other times is a misunderstanding of the function of government in any
practical sense of the term. If the only things that a government was required to do were what
everybody, or nearly everybody, wanted, there would be no need for the government to exist at all,
because the things would be done anyhow; this would be the impracticable ideal of the anarchist.
But if there are to be starving margins of population in most parts of the world, mere benevolence
cannot suffice. There would inevitably be ill feeling and jealousy between the provinces, with each
believing that it was not getting its fair share of the good things, and in fact, it would be like the
state of affairs with which we are all too familiar. If then there is ever to be a world government, it
will have to function as government do now, in the sense that it will have to coerce a minority - and
indeed it may often be a majority - into doing things they do not want to do." [emphasis mine] -
191
Civilization and a Universal Culture of Science
"Civilization might, loosely speaking, be counted as a sort of domestication, in that it imposes
on
man conditions not at all typical of wild life." - 115
"Civilization has taught man how to live in dense crowds, and by that very fact those crowds
are
likely ultimately to constitute a majority of the world's population. Already there are many who
prefer this crowded life, but there are others who do not, and these will gradually be eliminated.
Life in the crowded conditions of cities has many unattractive features, but in the long run these
may be overcome, not so much by altering them, but simply by changing the human race into liking
them." [emphasis mine] - 99
"To conclude, I have cited the past history of China as furnishing the type of an enduring
civilization. It seems to provide a model to which the future history of the world may be expected
broadly to conform. The scale will of course be altogether vaster, and the variety of happenings
cannot by any means be foreseen, but I believe that the underlying ground theme can be foreseen
and that in a general way it will be rather like the history of the Chinese Empire. The regions of the
world most of the time will be competing against one another. Occasionally - more rarely, than has
been the case in China - they will be united by some strong arm into an uneasy world-government,
which will endure for a period until it falls by the inevitable decay that finally destroys all dynasties.
There will be periods when some of the provinces relapse into barbarism, but all the time
civilization will survive in some of them. It will survive because it will be based on a single universal
culture, derived from the understanding of science; for it is only through this understanding that
the multitudes can continue to live. On this basic culture there will be overlaid other cultures, often
possessing a greater emotional appeal, which will vary according to climate and race from one
province to another. Most of the time and over most of the earth there will be severe pressure from
excess populations, and there will be periodic famines. There will be a consequent callousness
about the value of the individual's life, and often there will be cruelty to a degree of which we do
not willingly think. This however is only one side of the history. On the other side there will be vast
stores of learning, far beyond anything we can now imagine, and the intellectual stature of man will
rise to ever higher levels. And sometimes new discoveries will for a time relieve the human race
from its fears, and there will be golden ages, when man may for a time be free to create wonderful
flowerings in science, philosophy and the arts." [emphasis mine] - 203
Globalization Leads to Slavery
"As to the less successful members, the standard of living of any community living on its real
earnings, as the communities of the future will have to do, is inevitably lower than that of one
rapidly spending the savings of hundreds of millions of years as we are doing now. There will also
be the frequent threat of starvation, which will operate against the least efficient members of every
community with special force, so that it may be expected that the conditions of their work will be
much more severe than at present. Even now we see that a low standard of living in one country
has the advantage in competing against a high standard in another. If there is work to be done,
and, of two men of equal quality, one is willing to do it for less pay than the other, in the long run it
will be he who gets the work to do. Those who find the bad conditions supportable will be willing
to work harder and for less reward; in a broad sense of the term they are more efficient than the
others, because they get more done for less pay. There are of course many exceptions, for real skill
will get its reward, but in the long run it is inevitable that the lower types of labour will have an
exceedingly precarious life. One of the triumphs of our own golden age has been that slavery has
been abolished over a great part of the earth. It is difficult to see how this condition can be
maintained in the hard world of the future with its starving margins, and it is too be feared that all
too often a fraction of humanity will have to live in a state which, whatever it may be called, will be
indistinguishable from slavery." [emphasis mine] - 189
Computers To Predict the Near Future
"I am imagining that some new discovery should make the process far more precise for short-
term
planning. This might come about, for example, through the use of new high-speed counting
machines, which in a short space of time might explore the consequences of alternative policies
with a completeness that is far beyond anything that the human mind can aspire to achieve
directly." - 55
A program currently underway at the Pentagon called the Sentient World Simulation attempts to do
just that. From an article by Mark Baard:
"U.S defense, intel and homeland security officials are constructing a parallel world, on a
computer,
which the agencies will use to test propaganda messages and military strategies."
"Called the Sentient World Simulation, the program uses AI routines based upon the
psychological
theories of Marty Seligman, among others. (Seligman introduced the theory of "learned
helplessness" in the 1960s, after shocking beagles until they cowered, urinating, on the bottom of
their cages.)"
"Yank a country's water supply. Stage a military coup. SWS will tell you what happens next."
"The sim will feature an AR avatar for each person in the real world, based upon data collected
about us from government records and the internet."
Conclusion
The next part in this series will examine C. G. Darwin's views on the possibility of
domesticating
the whole of mankind. Part 3 will look into the importance of creeds on the future history of
mankind. The second last part in this series will examine C. G. Darwin's emphasis on the
desirability of eugenics and ways of perpetuating "superior" genes in future generations. Finally, I
will examine the difficulties in controlling the size of the world population as described in The Next
Million Years.
[1] Quotes from Charles Galton Darwin, The Next Million Years (1952).
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
