![]() ![]() ĭue to modern innovations in genetics, researchers have been able to identify a genetic mutation for autistic behavior (like the Beautiful Ones) in rodents to NLGN3 ( paper 1 paper 2). Across the world fertility rates continue to decline. In America immigrants are replacing the native population, masking the same trends. Other countries, like China, are following close behind. Evolutionary maladaptive behaviors are entrenched. Humanity’s population pyramids are inverting. Like Mouse Utopia, human populations have broken free of Darwinian selection. Prior to the industrial revolution, Western child mortality was around 40%, but this is now at 1%. The Mouse Utopia experiments raise interesting questions about human populations. The species in such settings die”Īt the end of the experiment all that were left were the Beautiful Ones, females not interested in males, and social outcasts who did not perform normal mouse behaviors. They are no longer capable of executing the more complex behaviors compatible with species survival. ![]() “Their spirit has died (the first death). When the social bonds of the colony ceased to function, Calhoun noted: He called these the “Beautiful Ones” as their grooming led to clean, attractive, smooth fur coats. Calhoun described them as autistic creatures capable of only the most basic physiological behaviors. They spent their entire day standing with others like them, eating, drinking, sleeping, and grooming themselves and each other. The most interesting were male effeminate mice who isolated themselves from the rest of the group and never had sex. Cannibalism began, despite the unlimited food availability. They started clustering together into large groups in areas designed to hold smaller numbers. Mice in the colony ceased to engage in normal, complex mice behaviors. Females had to pressure the males for sex. Males became disinterested in having sex. They kicked their young out of the nest before they learned proper social behaviors. ![]() įemales became more aggressive and male-like. This led to complete colony extinction.ĭuring the decline, a number of strange behaviors were noted. Long before the colony ran out of space, the population growth slowed, plateaued, and then began to fall as reproduction eventually ceased entirely. The mice reproduced as mice do and the population grew exponentially. His goal was to test population overcrowding. He seeded the experiment with eight of the best and healthiest stock mice he could acquire. He set up utopian environments: spacious with unlimited food and water, clean bedding, and no predation. In the 1960s and 1970s, researcher John Calhoun performed experiments on mice to find out what would happen to populations where Darwinian-selection mechanisms were removed. Populations that operate this way are under Darwinian-selection. Natural selection says that those with mostly beneficial mutations survive and pass their genes to their children and those with mostly negative mutations do not. It’s a matter of established science that mutations occur as a normal course of life and that these are passed to children during reproduction. Let’s see how what was written in 2019 compares to what is written today.ĭarwin’s theory of evolution has led to two primary mechanisms: random genetic mutation and natural selection. So we begin by introducing the Mouse Utopia experiment and analyze societal implications. “In any case, we should not assume that like the mouse utopia experiment we’ll get down to zero. At the People’s Blog, Nikolai Vladivostok had this to say: ![]() Spurned on by the recent SovietMen post “ Managed decline” at the People’s Blog, I’m reviving this mulit-part series that was previously published at the now defunct v5k2c2 blog (see part 2). The purpose of this series is to examine the-potentially causal-role that feminism plays in society’s ills. This is part of a series on feminism and the decline of society. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |