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videos:geopolitics [2026/05/31 02:03] – [demographics] jhagstrandvideos:geopolitics [2026/05/31 02:11] (current) – [demographics] jhagstrand
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 ===== demographics ===== ===== demographics =====
 <code> <code>
 +I am beginning to see a correlation between population and population density and the size of a landmass upon the development of the culture.  
 +
 +I am aware of the history of empires, but also of cultures as they move and spread across the land masses of the planet.  
 +
 Size of land mass  Size of land mass 
 Life cycle of culture  Life cycle of culture 
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 I am wondering if there is a field of study that encompasses all this. I am wondering if there is a field of study that encompasses all this.
  
-I am aware of the history of empires, but also of cultures as they move and spread across the land masses of the planet +China's population is peaking nowIndia's population is due to explode soon up to maybe 5 million. And after that Africa's population is due to explode to maybe 50 million.   (this is false per gemini)
  
-I am beginning to see a correlation between population and population density and the size of a landmass upon the development of the culture.  +search youtube: microbial competition time lapse bread
  
-Size of land mass  +</code>
-Life cycle of culture  +
-Timing and maximum size  +
-And technology development  +
-Population density +
  
-For each population explosion  
-When did the culture arrive  
-How did the culture's differentiate originally  
  
-China's population is peaking nowIndia'population is due to explode soon up to maybe 5 millionAnd after that Africa'population is due to explode to maybe 50 million +https://gemini.google.com/app/ae1ab087615e4312 
 + 
 +Yes, absolutely. If you want to dive deeper into this specific intersection of population, history, technology, and long-term societal shifts, you are looking at a few overlapping academic fields. 
 + 
 +Depending on which angle of this conversation fascinated you the most, the official academic fields are: 
 + 
 +--- 
 + 
 +===== 1. Demography (and Historical Demography) ===== 
 + 
 +This is the literal study of human populations—their size, structure, distribution, and how they change over time due to births, deaths, aging, and migration. 
 + 
 +  * **What they study:** If you are interested in the mathematical models of how Africa will triple in size while China halves, or how female literacy directly drops birth rates, that is **Demography**. 
 +  * **Historical Demography** specifically looks backward, using church records, ancient tax data, and archeology to reconstruct the population collapses of the Dark Ages or the boom of the Industrial Revolution. 
 + 
 +===== 2. Macrohistory (or Cliodynamics) ===== 
 + 
 +If you are fascinated by the sweeping, centuries-long patterns of how human societies rise, peak, crash, and adapt, you are looking at ////Macrohistory////
 + 
 +A cutting-edge, highly mathematical subfield of this is called ////Cliodynamics//// (named after Clio, the Greek muse of history). 
 + 
 +  * **What they study:** Cliodynamicists treat history like a hard science. They use mathematical modeling and massive historical databases to find the long-term cycles of human history. They look at how population growth creates economic pressure, how technology changes societal capacity, and what triggers the collapse of civilizations. 
 + 
 +===== 3. Human Geography / Population Geography ===== 
 + 
 +While history looks at these trends across time, ////Human Geography//// looks at them across //space//
 + 
 +  * **What they study:** This field studies how human populations interact with their physical environments, urbanization patterns, migration routes, and how regional identities (like Sub-Saharan Africa vs. North Africa) dictate economic and demographic behavior. 
 + 
 +===== 4. Development Economics ===== 
 + 
 +If you want to look at the exact mechanics of how a country transitions from a poor, agrarian society into an educated, technological powerhouse, this is the field. 
 + 
 +  * **What they study:** Development economists map out the "Demographic Dividend"—the window of time when a country'birth rates drop, leaving them with a massive workforce and very few dependents, which usually triggers an economic and technological explosion. 
 + 
 +--- 
 + 
 +==== If you want to read more... ==== 
 + 
 +If you want to look up foundational texts or thinkers in this area, search for terms like ////"The Demographic Transition Model"//// (the formalized theory of the birth/death rate flip) or the works of authors who bridge these fields, like ////Vaclav Smil//// (who writes deeply about the interplay of energy, population, and technology) or ////Peter Turchin//// (one of the founders of Cliodynamics). 
 + 
 +Which of these angles do you find most compelling—the hard data of population mapping, or the grand, cyclical theories of history and collapse? 
  
-search youtube: microbial competition time lapse bread 
-</code> 
  
videos/geopolitics.1780207430.txt.gz · Last modified: 2026/05/31 02:03 by jhagstrand

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