jwgh: (Default)
Jacob Haller ([personal profile] jwgh) wrote2007-02-11 03:36 pm
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anthology note

For those keeping track, I finished Baen's Galaxy: The Best Of My Years this morning and launched into The Best Of Crank! during lunch, so that little project's coming right along. I don't want to influence the results of the poll, but I think it is safe to note that the second piece in the Galaxy book, an essay by Isaac Asimov titled "Is There Hope For The Future", contains a series of predictions for what the world might look like at the beginning of the 21st century, the first of which is: "World population will stand at 7,000,000,000, but all over the world, heroic and successful measures will be holding the line, and every effort will be made to lower the birth rate to the point where the population will decline toward an ultimate goal of perhaps no more than 1,000,000,000." This prediction is actually one of the most accurate in the essay.

[identity profile] james-nicoll.livejournal.com 2007-02-11 08:38 pm (UTC)(link)
More details, please!

[identity profile] mmcirvin.livejournal.com 2007-02-11 08:51 pm (UTC)(link)
As I pointed out in my essay about Asimov's 1974 commencement speech, in some ways population control has actually worked out better than Asimov was willing to predict. We were only at six and a half billion in 2000. What he got wrong is that for the most part this isn't happening because some Board of Population Control is taking overt measures--Amartya Sen seems to think that even in the country with the most obvious such program (China) the drop in birthrate may be taking place for unrelated reasons.