INFANT MORTALITY AND THE LAW OF NATURAL SELECTION.

JAMA ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 290 (11) ◽  
pp. 1528
2021 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 7
Author(s):  
Karen Kh. Momdzhyan

2014 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 449-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALICJA DROZD-LIPIŃSKA ◽  
EWA KLUGIER ◽  
MAŁGORZATA KAMIŃSKA-CZAKŁOSZ

SummaryAnalyses of historical or modern populations indicate a strong relationship between mortality level and standard of living, measured, among other factors, by degree of urbanization. The aim of this study was to assess mortality rates in children of up to 5 years of age in two populations living under different conditions in central modern Poland at the end of the 19th century: the rural parish of Kowal, under Russian partition, and Toruń, an industrial and urbanized centre under Prussian partition. Data on births and deaths were taken from birth certificate registries and from the Prussian statistics yearbooks for 1876–1894. Death rates of children aged 0–5 years were calculated, and also for annual age ranges. The urban population had lower birth rates (37.19‰), natural increase rates (8.0‰), population dynamics rates (1.26‰), which provide information about the relation between two components of a natural increase, i.e. births and deaths, and an over-mortality of boys in relation to girls. In the rural population these values were all higher: 53.67‰, 18.11‰ and 1.59‰ respectively. No impact was found of social stratification on child mortality in the wide age group of 0–5 years. However, for subsequent one-year age groups significant relationships between mortality level and size and industrialization level of the population centres were noted. The living conditions of infants in Toruń, although being in a better position as an area annexed by Prussia, were markedly worse than those of rural Kowal Parish. In the urban centre infant mortality was slightly over 269 for 1000 live born, and in Kowal Parish it was 163 for 1000 live born. The high infant mortality was balanced in Toruń by the higher mortality levels of children aged 2–5 years compared with Kowal Parish. Natural selection in the city had the greatest impact on infants, who did not have the protective influence of breast-feeding because women had to return to work shortly after giving birth. The lower infant mortality of mothers in the countryside due to longer breast-feeding led to larger family sizes. In 1871–1890 in the villages the number of children per women was about 7.42, whereas in Toruń it ranged from 4.4 to 5.2. The probability of death among children who survived the first year of life was higher in the countryside than the town. In the rural parish, perhaps because of cultural factors such as breast-feeding or working practices making full-time baby-sitting possible, children who did not reach the age of 1 year were not subjected to such intensive natural selection. Overall, differences in child mortality in the two centres in 19th central Poland resulted from ecological and cultural conditions, rather than from social and economical reasons (living under different partitions).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuchang Wu ◽  
Shiro Furuya ◽  
Zihang Wang ◽  
Jenna E Nobles ◽  
Jason M Fletcher ◽  
...  

Following more than a century of phenotypic measurement of natural selection processes, much recent work explores relationships between molecular genetic measurements and realized fitness in the next generation. We take a novel approach to the study of contemporary selective pressure by examining which genetic variants are "sustained" in populations as mortality exposure declines. Specifically, we deploy a so-called "regional GWAS" that links the infant mortality rate (IMR) by place and year in the UK with common genetic variants among cohorts in the UK Biobank. These cohorts (born 1936-1970) saw a decline in IMR from above 65 per 1,000 to under 20 per 1,000, with substantial subnational variation and spikes alongside wartime exposures. Our results show several genome-wide significant loci, including LCT and TLR10/1/6, related to area-level cohort IMR exposure during gestation and infancy. Genetic correlations are found across multiple domains, including fertility, cognition, health behaviors, and health outcomes, suggesting an important role for cohort selection in modern populations.


1978 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 423-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth V. Nelson

The old argument from design in Nature, as given by Paley, which formerly seemed to me so conclusive, fails, now that the law of Natural Selection has been discovered. Charles Darwin


2018 ◽  
pp. 236-254
Author(s):  
Timothy C. Campbell

This chapter aims to measure the biopolitical stakes of Darwin’s thinking of variability and natural selection in a historical ontology of ourselves today. When most contemporary ontologies point to catastrophe and mass extinction, what kinds of aesthetic and political strategies does a biopolitical reading of Darwin make available? One possibility, the chapter argues, is through a reconsideration of comedy and its associated pratfalls, the result of the law of gravity having been exiled from Darwin’s Origin of Species.


Synthese ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. van Hateren

AbstractThe causal efficacy of a material system is usually thought to be produced by the law-like actions and interactions of its constituents. Here, a specific system is constructed and explained that produces a cause that cannot be understood in this way, but instead has novel and autonomous efficacy. The construction establishes a proof-of-feasibility of strong emergence. The system works by utilizing randomness in a targeted and cyclical way, and by relying on sustained evolution by natural selection. It is not vulnerable to standard arguments against strong emergence, in particular ones that assume that the physical realm is causally closed. Moreover, it does not suffer from epiphenomenalism or causal overdetermination. The system uses only standard material components and processes, and is fully consistent with naturalism. It is discussed whether the emergent cause can still be viewed as ‘material’ in the way that term is commonly understood.


Homo sapiens now has the power to veto the evolution of his own species. In the mathematics of ‘overkill’ it is estimated (Pauling 1963) that the nuclear stockpile amounts to more than 320 000 megatons, i.e. a ration of more than 100 tons of TNT-equivalent for every man, woman and child on earth or 14 tons per acre of the entire land-surface. Since Homo sapiens is exceptional among the creatures in so far as he deliberately destroys his own species in internecine war, and since he has now the capacity for annihilation it becomes necessary to ritualize his acquired habits of self-destruction. That means contriving intra-species relationships as sensibly as do the animals and observing the Law of the Jungle, by which no predator ever exterminates the species on which it preys nor vents its aggressive instincts to the hazard of its own kind. ‘War is Nature’s pruning hook’, said Sir Arthur Keith (1927). That was a strange interpretation of ‘the survival of the fittest’, but it was the kind of statement which could be invoked as scientific ‘authority’ for accepting mutual destruction as an innate characteristic and for regarding war as part of the mechanism of natural selection rather than as a temporary deviation.


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