Thomas Robert Malthus's""An Essay on the Principle of
Population" was an immediate succes de scandale" when it appeared
in 1798. Arguing that nature is niggardly and that societies, both
human and animal, tend to overstep the limits of natural resources
in "perpetual oscillation between happiness and misery," he found
himself attacked on all sides--by Romantic poets, utopian thinkers,
and the religious establishment. Though Malthus has never
disappeared, he has been perpetually misunderstood. This book is at
once a major reassessment of Malthus's ideas and an intellectual
history of the origins of modern debates about demography,
resources, and the environment.
Against the ferment of Enlightenment ideals about the
perfectibility of mankind and the grim realities of life in the
eighteenth century, Robert Mayhew explains the genesis of the
Essay" and Malthus's preoccupation with birth and death rates. He
traces Malthus's collision course with the Lake poets, his
important revisions to the Essay, " and composition of his other
great work, Principles of Political Economy. "Mayhew suggests we
see the author in his later writings as an environmental economist
for his persistent concern with natural resources, land, and the
conditions of their use. Mayhew then pursues Malthus's many
afterlives in the Victorian world and beyond.
Today, the Malthusian dilemma makes itself feltonce again, as
demography and climate change come together on the same
environmental agenda. By opening a new door onto Malthus's
arguments and their transmission to the present day, Robert Mayhew
gives historical depth to our current planetary concerns."
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