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Malthusian
[ mal-thoo-zhuhn, -zee-uhn ]
adjective
- of or relating to the theories of T. R. Malthus, which state that population tends to increase faster, at a geometrical ratio, than the means of subsistence, which increases at an arithmetical ratio, and that this will result in an inadequate supply of the goods supporting life unless war, famine, or disease reduces the population or the increase of population is checked.
noun
- a follower of Malthus.
Malthusian
/ mælˈθjuːzɪən /
adjective
- of or relating to the theory of Malthus stating that increases in population tend to exceed increases in the means of subsistence and that therefore sexual restraint should be exercised
noun
- a supporter of this theory
Derived Forms
- Malˈthusianism, noun
Other Words From
- Mal·thu·sian·ism noun
- an·ti-Mal·thu·si·an adjective noun
- an·ti-Mal·thu·si·an·ism noun
- non-Mal·thu·si·an adjective noun
- pro-Mal·thu·si·an adjective noun
- pro-Mal·thu·si·an·ism noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of Malthusian1
Example Sentences
Others sounded the alarm about global overpopulation, resurrecting Malthusian fears about the human population growing faster than our food sources can sustain us.
But as a wave of economic liberalization swept through India in the late 1980s, the Malthusian nightmare never materialized.
At the World Economic Forum, organizers tried their best to change the gloomy Malthusian narrative about aging.
Still, the words “voluntary human extinction” often elicit reactions of spluttering horror, and terms like “eco-fascist” and “Malthusian” are often lobbed at the group.
This is traceable in large part to its Communist government’s “one-child” policy, in force between 1980 and 2016, which was an especially simplistic — and, with its coerced abortions and sterilizations, harsh — application of Malthusian thinking.
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