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Chapple, W. A. (William Allan), 1864-1936

"The Fertility of the Unfit"


He advised moral restraint as a preventive measure in the hope that vice
and misery, as checks would be superseded, and that no more would be
born into the world than there was ample food to supply. He believed
that moral restraint was the check of civilized man, and as civilization
proceeded, this check would replace the others, and prevent absolutely
the population pressing upon the limits of subsistence.
He saw in moral restraint only self-denial, constant continence, and
entertained not a doubt, that the generative instinct would be cheated
of its natural fruit. The passion for marriage is so strong (thought
Malthus) that there is no fear for the race; it cannot be
over-controlled.
The gratification of the sexual instinct, and procreation were the same
thing in the mind of Malthus.
But this is not so.
A physiological law makes it possible, in a large proportion of strictly
normal women, for union to take place without fertilisation. If it were
possible to maintain an intermittent restraint in strict conformity with
this law, it would control considerably the population of the world.
It is easier to practice intermittent than to practice constant
restraint.
It is just here that Malthus failed to anticipate the future.


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