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by lifeisstillgood
1319 days ago
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Yeah your approach is the more usual commonly accepted idea - poor people stopped dying moved to cities got educated became a productive middle class. The above quoted book tried to argue that the poor dying continued and the middle classes of victorian briton had more kids and hence took over - a sort of poorly argued eugenics wrapped in the usual "it's culture innit" argument. However Like I say I have only read enough of the book to decide it's in my reading list only after I discover immortality. |
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That a simple mathematical fact like that is considered eugenics is reality denial on par with the flat earth society.
The 19th century was special because people figured out how to use coal to do the work done by muscle in the middle ages. The previous centuries had seen a continued decline in capital costs. E.g. mediaeval interest rates were routinely 15% and more for secured loans.