Are Culture or Genes Driving High Family Sizes in Certain Groups?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the factors influencing high completed family sizes in certain groups, specifically examining the roles of culture and genetics. It touches on evolutionary perspectives and the impact of agricultural technologies.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that both culture and genes influence family size, proposing a sustainability factor in nature that affects reproductive strategies across species.
  • Another participant introduces the idea that advancements in agricultural technology may have increased the limits on family size for humans.
  • A later reply corrects the terminology used for agricultural advancements, suggesting "farming" or "agriculture" as alternatives to "agri-technology."
  • There is a discussion about the efficiency of farming technologies and their implications for family size, with differing views on terminology.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the terminology related to agricultural advancements, but there is no consensus on the primary factors driving family size, as the discussion remains open to multiple interpretations.

Contextual Notes

The discussion includes assumptions about the relationship between resource availability and family size, as well as the definitions of terms related to agriculture and technology, which remain unresolved.

edpell
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Is it culture or genes or both that drive some groups to have high completed family sizes?
 
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edpell said:
Is it culture or genes or both that drive some groups to have high completed family sizes?
It's both. There is a sustainability factor within nature for a large or small family. The idea is that parents that do not nurture infants, like ants will produce more than parents who spend the energy to nurture their infants, like humans. This is usually controlled through evolution depending on resource usage, space, etc. There is usually a limit for every species
However, for humans, with the rise of agri-technology (i just made that up btw, don't know the term), you can say that the limit has increased.
 
as much as I like agri-technology I think the term is farming or if you want to be fancy agriculture.
 
Well see i would have said farming, but I am referring to the technologies that have made farming efficient; hence agri-technology
 

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