Thomas Malthus was a famous and influential British thinker in the late 1700's and early 1800's, around the time of Enlightenment. Malthus was writing in a time when thinkers were consumed with the idea of progress. They believed that human society and the human species could be perfected, and that people were marching on a path towards perfection and the final evolution of human society. These ideas essentially underpinned the notion of the Enlightenment in Europe.
Against this contextual backdrop, Thomas Malthus argued the exact opposite--that society was actually in trouble and not going to progress like they thought. Malthusian theory claimed that people would not be able to perfect their society as claimed because there was a problem with food production and population growth. He said that nature limits people’s ability as a human group to expand because nature puts limits on the expansion of the population, due to the need to produce food for everyone.
EXAMPLE
Society may contain rapidly multiplying people, but it also requires plants and vegetables to be produced to feed people. Malthus argued that society can only produce so much subsistence, which will then limit the ability to expand.Malthus was writing just as capitalism was about to industrialize and with industrialization, technology and technological advancement provided more food. It opened up new ways to grow more crops and to produce food more efficiently. Therefore, there was more food, and Malthus’s claims were forgotten. People thought they had overcome any obstacles, and the extent of industrialization raised living standards and increased food production.
IN CONTEXT
Today, there are 7 billion people in the world, many of whom are in want of food, living in abject poverty, with food prices at an all time high in developed countries. Some scholars argue that the world is entering a food crisis.
In the long run, Malthus may be correct--society simply hasn’t hit his predicted limits yet.
Malthus’ theories revolve around a very important idea in society, which is the relationship between technology, the ability to wield technology to produce subsistence, and its relationship to population growth. This relationship is at the core of demographic transition theory, which is the theory that relates birth rates and the overall population to levels of technology. This graph is a visual representation of demographic transition theory.
The bottom of the graph represents the different levels of technology: pre-industrial, early industrial, mature industrial, and--the current level--post-industrial. Below those levels are shown the rates of population growth.
Another way to graphically represent demographics and the overall population in society is a population pyramid, which is a graphical representation of population broken down by age and sex.
Males are on one side of the line, and females are on the other. Each level, or step, of the pyramid represents an age segment--for example, males ages zero to ten, 10 to 20, 20 to 30, 30 to 40, 40 to 50, and so on, with the age segments ascending up the pyramid. The length, or size of each step represents a share of the total population, as a percentage.
You can see that there are more young people in society and with each successively older age bracket, the percentage share of the total population gets smaller, and takes a pyramid shape. Population pyramids are helpful for describing and enabling sociologists to ascertain a sex ratio, which is the ratio of males to females in society.
If you look at the United States' population pyramid, it might look a little different--a little more square-shaped than pyramidal. The U.S. has a more equal distribution of the population in society. By looking at the different makeup of population pyramids, you can make inferences about the nature of demographics in each particular society, which is why they're a useful tool for demographers.
Source: This work is adapted from Sophia author Zach Lamb.