"I therefore urge you to do as I did, and have no children."
Great, take smart people out of the gene pool. I don't think he's thought through his cunning plan. As he says, he doesn't believe he'll cause everyone to not have children. But the only people who even know who he is are the relatively smarter part of the population, and therefore any of those who act on his advice have just diminished humanity's potential.
My boy is the best thing that ever happened to me. I believe the world is a better place for him being in it.
Rather than "not have children" be the solution (of smart people, no less!), wouldn't it be better to figure out how to make the lives of all these children more meaningful, and by extension the life and effect of humanity?
That's a common misconception about genetics. In fact, the children of a very smart person tend to regress toward the mean (just as the children of a very dumb person). So a smart person choosing not to have children doesn't typically produce the outcome you think it does.
Also, your view overlooks the power of ideas, and the degree to which a person can choose to focus on ideas instead of children.
Here's an example -- do you know the names of Einstein's children? I do -- they're special relativity, general relativity, and the photoelectric effect. They look great together in family pictures.
I appreciate having children makes it hard to think about these things straight, but producing less children really is the only way (short of killing others) out of overpopulation and all that it's doing to our planet.
The gene pool quality line of thinking doesn't lead to anything good. Our gene pool is pretty resilient to these things. If our smarts genes were easily ousted by ones procreating like rabbits, we would have gotten rid of intelligence a long time ago.
>Great, take smart people out of the gene pool. I don't think he's thought through his cunning plan. As he says, he doesn't believe he'll cause everyone to not have children. But the only people who even know who he is are the relatively smarter part of the population, and therefore any of those who act on his advice have just diminished humanity's potential.
Actually it could be the inverse. For one, RMS is quite kooky.
Second, who said that those that follow his advice would be the "smarter part of the population"?
He is entitled to his own opinion. I am glad for the four children I have, who I expect will be net contributors to the well-being of humanity.
AFTER EDIT:
The one reply to my comment here asks a pertinent question, which I hope I have given an adequate answer in a new reply. Meanwhile I will revise this comment to note that, as a subsequent comment has pointed out, there are already many countries in the world with negative population growth and a likely trend that the entire world will reach a peak population and then begin to have declining population while my children are middle-aged (and when I may, perhaps, still be alive). So, yes, RMS is certainly welcome not to have children if he is concerned about what bearing children might do to his family life or to the world as a whole, but I hope HN participants will be open to the possibility that some people choose to have children with their eyes open, knowing the trade-offs, and have a channel through having children to help you, me, and the whole world.
Stallman might not have thought this through or not realized how the pressues of evolution will eventually nullify his choice. For all those who make a conscious decision to avoid having kids, those who are genetically fitter at resisting the urge to reproduce are therefore less likely to pass on their genes. Also, of course those who don't bother resisting or have less genetic inclination to avoid reproducing are more likely to. Thus the next generation will inherit the genes of parents with less resistance to reproduction. Thus if the theory of evolution is true, and all other things are equal, the next generation will be more likely to reproduce. This cycle would repeat until the genes of those who decline to reproduce to save humanity are no longer in the gene pool. Thus Stallmans choice is only effective over a very short number of generations.
Not only that, if those who are more likely to decline to have kids is a good quality, they are actually hurting future generations by removing themselves from contributing it to future generations. This is of course their right.
This is not a new idea, the idea that population controls are doomed to failure is main idea of the novel 'The Mote in God's Eye' by Niven and Pournelle.
The problem is real of course. However, when considering reproduction, which is so intimately tied with evolution, perhaps one should be aware of the consequences of evolution or possibly even use it when trying to solve the problem. Unless those who have fewer offspring are more likely to pass their genes on to the next generation, those in the next generation will have genes that favor more offspring.
I don't think overpopulation should ever be a factor in determining if you want to have a child or not. A layperson has no responsibility nor influence in that matter - that's something for policymakers and implementers to handle. You should decide on a child based on your situation and desires.
Also, more people isn't always a bad thing, even in an overpopulated world. If a person is a net gain for society, then it would be a loss not to have him born. If you're healthy and are willing and capable of raising a child in nurturing family, please do so. A well raised person can offset his impact on the world and contribute even more than they take.
> I don't think overpopulation should ever be a factor in determining if you want to have a child or not. A layperson has no responsibility nor influence in that matter - that's something for policymakers and implementers to handle.
On the contrary! Deferring to governments a responsibility for personal choices is always a dangerous mistake. Governments are supposed to reflect the values of the people. But if the people automatically defer to the government responsibility for their values, the entire system collapses.
To me, the remedy is education, and it's been demonstrated over and over again that, as a woman's educational prospects improve, so does her wish to limit her family size.
Overpopulation doesn't result from masses of people letting governments choose their values. Overpopulation results from billions of individual choices, based on rationalizations like yours. To wit:
> Also, more people isn't always a bad thing, even in an overpopulated world.
This is like arguing that, during a forest fire, more fuel isn't always a bad thing. But in point of fact, yes, it is always a bad thing.
> A well raised person can offset his impact on the world and contribute even more than they take.
Yes and every parent on this planet blithely rationalizes that his/her children will be that sort of child. And they're wrong.
It seems we all live in Lake Wobegon, where all the children are above average.
The basic logic is that, when there are too many people, who they are as individuals stops mattering. Even if we could control the outcomes and only have extraordinary, saintly children, do we really want a world filled with starving saints?
>I don't think overpopulation should ever be a factor in determining if you want to have a child or not. A layperson has no responsibility nor influence in that matter - that's something for policymakers and implementers to handle.
The very notion of democracy is that there is NO layperson.
The citizen very much has responsibility for his state's actions, and policymakers and implementers are only supposed to reflect the general will of the population.
> A layperson has no responsibility nor influence in that matter - that's something for policymakers and implementers to handle
If you start from belief that you and your children won't be able to influence policy and government, and people also can't make a difference by acting locally and practicing what they preach... you paint a pretty bleak picture.
A well raised person can probably offset his net direct impact. The point made by Stallman is that this person has no possibility to asses (much less offset) his descendants impact (children, children's children, ...)
To make sure you are offsetting your complete global impact, you have to get rid of the unknowns. Hence, no having children is the only option.
> First of all, it disregards the tremendous disaster that global heating and destruction of the natural world are leading towards. 30 years from now, large parts of humanity will probably find it hard to get water or food, let alone contraception.
Large parts of humanity have always had a problem getting water or food and it had nothing to do with global warming, rather politics, governance, and culture. These will always be a bigger problem.
>Large parts of humanity have always had a problem getting water or food and it had nothing to do with global warming, rather politics, governance, and culture.
Yes. But not relevant. One has to remove such constants in order to see what's new.
So, while "Large parts of humanity have always had a problem getting water or food and it had nothing to do with global warming", now it also HAS to do with global warming.
Increasingly smaller fraction of humanity is has a problem getting water or food, from almost everyone not that long ago, through 40% of the world population in the 1980s to less than 20% nowadays. This change is due to economic growth, which in turn is influenced primarily by the technological progress, also by politics, governance, and culture, as you say, but also by the population growth--when there are more people the economy grows faster.
Also note that regardless of what you think in general about the impact the growing number of humans has on the economic growth, it's hardly debatable that if Richard Stallman specifically had decided to have children, his children would have very likely contributed much more than an average human, just like RMS himself has.
So in reality his decision was exactly counterproductive providing parts of humanity with water or food.
To all the parents out there (I am not one): Thank you. You don't know me, but your decision to have a child is as good as if you donated maybe $1e-4 to my 401(k). And everyone else's. If you live in the US, more. If you are a very smart and hard working person, even more. By caring for your own child, you're also feeding some hungry child in Africa 25 years from now. Richard Stallman should be grateful to you.
Wow, all of the fathers are coming out of the woodwork to justify their decisions. I, for one, agree with him. Some levels of dedication aren't possible when your attention is diverted to offspring constantly.
as a father, i may go out of my way to disagree with him to justify my own past decisions. as an unattractive social reject, i may go out of my way to agree with him.
we are naturally going to have very intense feelings and be very egotistical one way or another about the subject of spreading our own DNA.
In my personal experience, often when discussing war people will resort to the "there are too many people" excuse if I first convince then that other justifications to kill are invalid.
Smart people don't only come from smart parents. While I'm sure there's a factor, I suspect the part of genetics is overstated in intelligence. Or, to put it another way, maybe we should earnestly focus on educating the kids we have as well as we can.
I'm not sure what the official stance on this is, but I always thought "fewer" was used in the case of discrete subjects, and "less" in the case of continuous. So it's always amusing when someone talks about "less people".
I don't buy the overpopulation argument. There is good evidence to suggest that after 2050 the human population is going to decline and might reach as low as 2 billion people in the very long term.
After 2050? How many would have to die from diseases, hunger and political tensions (countries grabbing for resources) until then? What impact will 40 more years of population increase?
it just is either or -- or probability wise close to it. from the time and demand it takes to be a good parent, to the many things you have to do to afford children, to the fact that being responsible for somebody makes you largely beholden to people with money and health insurance, it just is.
at least for the salary earning classes.
people's range of behavior is narrowed by the hierarchy of needs. having a child amplifies this effect.
if you want to do something revolutionary that potentially threatens the status quo, it is better to be either independently wealthy or have much fewer economic needs and pressures.
Well, if that is how you feel about children, not having them is probably a good idea. I'm not criticizing him, even if it might sound like that, just pointing out that his decision might be righ for him.
i hope we overpopulate the heck out of this planet, maybe once we're shoulder to shoulder on every sq meter we'll have the necessary impetus to get off this damned rock...
Yes, because "impetus" is all it takes, and the laws of physics like the speed of light, energy needs, scale of such a project etc, have little play into this...
Isn't it crazy that the more education a woman has, the fewer children she has? You would hope that the more educated would have more, since they would be better able to care for and educate their children.
This guy. Remember the Monsters of Springfield episode of "The Simpsons"? Where the song was "Just Don't Look, Just Don't Look"? That's how I feel about him. After a decade of rediculous statements and vastly decreasing returns, it's time to stop paying any sort of attention to RMS.
[+] [-] a3n|13 years ago|reply
Great, take smart people out of the gene pool. I don't think he's thought through his cunning plan. As he says, he doesn't believe he'll cause everyone to not have children. But the only people who even know who he is are the relatively smarter part of the population, and therefore any of those who act on his advice have just diminished humanity's potential.
My boy is the best thing that ever happened to me. I believe the world is a better place for him being in it.
Rather than "not have children" be the solution (of smart people, no less!), wouldn't it be better to figure out how to make the lives of all these children more meaningful, and by extension the life and effect of humanity?
[+] [-] lutusp|13 years ago|reply
That's a common misconception about genetics. In fact, the children of a very smart person tend to regress toward the mean (just as the children of a very dumb person). So a smart person choosing not to have children doesn't typically produce the outcome you think it does.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regression_toward_the_mean
Also, your view overlooks the power of ideas, and the degree to which a person can choose to focus on ideas instead of children.
Here's an example -- do you know the names of Einstein's children? I do -- they're special relativity, general relativity, and the photoelectric effect. They look great together in family pictures.
[+] [-] zurn|13 years ago|reply
The gene pool quality line of thinking doesn't lead to anything good. Our gene pool is pretty resilient to these things. If our smarts genes were easily ousted by ones procreating like rabbits, we would have gotten rid of intelligence a long time ago.
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
So your life was meaningless without having a child? And, following the same logic, your son's life is nothing too, unless he gets a child too?
Or do you mean "it's the best thing that happened to you", but other things were quite nice too?
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
Actually it could be the inverse. For one, RMS is quite kooky.
Second, who said that those that follow his advice would be the "smarter part of the population"?
[+] [-] Kudzu_Bob|13 years ago|reply
For ostensibly different reasons now we've got do-gooders doing exactly the same damned thing to us.
[+] [-] tokenadult|13 years ago|reply
AFTER EDIT:
The one reply to my comment here asks a pertinent question, which I hope I have given an adequate answer in a new reply. Meanwhile I will revise this comment to note that, as a subsequent comment has pointed out, there are already many countries in the world with negative population growth and a likely trend that the entire world will reach a peak population and then begin to have declining population while my children are middle-aged (and when I may, perhaps, still be alive). So, yes, RMS is certainly welcome not to have children if he is concerned about what bearing children might do to his family life or to the world as a whole, but I hope HN participants will be open to the possibility that some people choose to have children with their eyes open, knowing the trade-offs, and have a channel through having children to help you, me, and the whole world.
[+] [-] gnosis|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] zurn|13 years ago|reply
This argument would be equally (in)valid for any tragedy of the commons type situation, like CO2 emissions or fisheries depletion etc.
[+] [-] unknown|13 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] busticket|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lifeformed|13 years ago|reply
Also, more people isn't always a bad thing, even in an overpopulated world. If a person is a net gain for society, then it would be a loss not to have him born. If you're healthy and are willing and capable of raising a child in nurturing family, please do so. A well raised person can offset his impact on the world and contribute even more than they take.
[+] [-] lutusp|13 years ago|reply
On the contrary! Deferring to governments a responsibility for personal choices is always a dangerous mistake. Governments are supposed to reflect the values of the people. But if the people automatically defer to the government responsibility for their values, the entire system collapses.
To me, the remedy is education, and it's been demonstrated over and over again that, as a woman's educational prospects improve, so does her wish to limit her family size.
Overpopulation doesn't result from masses of people letting governments choose their values. Overpopulation results from billions of individual choices, based on rationalizations like yours. To wit:
> Also, more people isn't always a bad thing, even in an overpopulated world.
This is like arguing that, during a forest fire, more fuel isn't always a bad thing. But in point of fact, yes, it is always a bad thing.
> A well raised person can offset his impact on the world and contribute even more than they take.
Yes and every parent on this planet blithely rationalizes that his/her children will be that sort of child. And they're wrong.
It seems we all live in Lake Wobegon, where all the children are above average.
The basic logic is that, when there are too many people, who they are as individuals stops mattering. Even if we could control the outcomes and only have extraordinary, saintly children, do we really want a world filled with starving saints?
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
The very notion of democracy is that there is NO layperson.
The citizen very much has responsibility for his state's actions, and policymakers and implementers are only supposed to reflect the general will of the population.
[+] [-] zurn|13 years ago|reply
If you start from belief that you and your children won't be able to influence policy and government, and people also can't make a difference by acting locally and practicing what they preach... you paint a pretty bleak picture.
[+] [-] gonvaled|13 years ago|reply
To make sure you are offsetting your complete global impact, you have to get rid of the unknowns. Hence, no having children is the only option.
[+] [-] mistermann|13 years ago|reply
Large parts of humanity have always had a problem getting water or food and it had nothing to do with global warming, rather politics, governance, and culture. These will always be a bigger problem.
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
Yes. But not relevant. One has to remove such constants in order to see what's new.
So, while "Large parts of humanity have always had a problem getting water or food and it had nothing to do with global warming", now it also HAS to do with global warming.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification
[+] [-] pfedor|13 years ago|reply
Also note that regardless of what you think in general about the impact the growing number of humans has on the economic growth, it's hardly debatable that if Richard Stallman specifically had decided to have children, his children would have very likely contributed much more than an average human, just like RMS himself has.
So in reality his decision was exactly counterproductive providing parts of humanity with water or food.
To all the parents out there (I am not one): Thank you. You don't know me, but your decision to have a child is as good as if you donated maybe $1e-4 to my 401(k). And everyone else's. If you live in the US, more. If you are a very smart and hard working person, even more. By caring for your own child, you're also feeding some hungry child in Africa 25 years from now. Richard Stallman should be grateful to you.
[+] [-] dsowers|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] datapimp|13 years ago|reply
as a father, i may go out of my way to disagree with him to justify my own past decisions. as an unattractive social reject, i may go out of my way to agree with him.
we are naturally going to have very intense feelings and be very egotistical one way or another about the subject of spreading our own DNA.
[+] [-] unknown|13 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] jakeogh|13 years ago|reply
That is the UN's low estimate.
The median UN human population projection estimates that we peak at 10 billion people around 2100.
Chart at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malthusian_catastrophe (I wont pretend wikipedia is a source, the chart could be completely wroing, I have not crunched the numbers at http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/unpp/panel_population.htm myself)
In my personal experience, often when discussing war people will resort to the "there are too many people" excuse if I first convince then that other justifications to kill are invalid.
There is an organization that argues the other side of Stallman's reasoning: http://overpopulationisamyth.com/category/categories/pop101
[+] [-] digisign|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mkingston|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
Or people thinking like you, for that matter.
What exactly makes you think you are worth more than a "hick, vato or homeboy"?
A high IQ? I'd take kindness, altruism and consideration for others any day.
Not to mention your comment borders on full blown racism, stopping just short of the "n" word.
http://xkcd.com/603/
[+] [-] gordaco|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Kudzu_Bob|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] miles|13 years ago|reply
http://www.vhemt.org/biobreed.htm#schopenquote
though RMS states his goal is simply less humans, not no humans.
[+] [-] mkingston|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bayesianhorse|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kaonashi|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|13 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] tbrooks|13 years ago|reply
I don't buy the false choice of GNU/no children or children/no GNU. Why does it have to be either/or?
[+] [-] datapimp|13 years ago|reply
at least for the salary earning classes.
people's range of behavior is narrowed by the hierarchy of needs. having a child amplifies this effect.
if you want to do something revolutionary that potentially threatens the status quo, it is better to be either independently wealthy or have much fewer economic needs and pressures.
[+] [-] geon|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] maerF0x0|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] joelberman|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] aba_sababa|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] busticket|13 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] flagnog|13 years ago|reply
Darwin would get a chuckle out of this.
[+] [-] jeffehobbs|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] olgeni|13 years ago|reply
Then, they were replaced by the Selfish Gene, and Science looked like a winner for a while.
Then came Stallman, with His Bright Idea: the Forrest Gump Gene That Watches Other Selfish Genes Thrive, And Then Dies.
In the end, Selfish Parrots will eventually inherit the world, and Science will triumph again.
[+] [-] unknown|13 years ago|reply
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