Foundational Theories of Environmental sociology

                                            Malthusian Perspective


Thomas Robert Malthus,1766 February 13th,England Surrey.
Malthus believed that the number of people grows faster than the amount of food we can produce. Because of this, There would fundamental imbalance be to people and not enough or insufficient subsistence food will be depletion or decrease, which leading to hunger and big problems in society like wars and famine.


Thomas Robert Malthus and His World

Malthusian theory was first proposed in 1798

Thomas Malthus first proposed Malthusian theory in a famous 1798 essay



Malthusian Trap: This concept refers to the situation where population growth outstrips agricultural production.


When population increase exceeds agricultural output, a situation known as the Malthusian Trap occurs, which results in famine, illness, and death. Impact on Darwin's Hypothesis Charles Darwin drew inspiration for his theory of natural selection from Malthus's theories regarding struggle for resources. Darwin echoed Malthus' theories on population pressures by applying the idea of battle for existence, in which only the fittest survive. David Ricardo's contentions He contends that the population will either grow cognitively or be able to avoid the Malthusian trap through technical breakthroughs in industry and agriculture.


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