Malthusian Population

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Reverend Thomas R. Malthus, a member of the Anglican Church, was born in 1766 and passed away in 1834. Over the years Malthus developed a proposal that today is known as the Malthusian Proposition/Equation. In his proposition he states population grows exponentially rather than arithmetically. In 1834 the Poor Law Amendment Act was created and it was the highest important piece that the social legislation had ever portrayed.
Malthus believed society would flourish and then eventually collapse. It is a pattern that societies will reach an optimum and then evidently have a catastrophe for example the Roman Empire. The ratio of humans to resources causes us to wear out our ways and means of life which cause humans to be unrighteous but all men can be perfected. Individuals will reproduce until there are very confined material goods. Malthus suggests that we are not a corporate, we are uncoordinated and we have numerous perceptions that assemble us to be morally wrong.
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It was the complete opposite of what Adam Smith wrote at the end of the eighteenth century, 1776, when he discussed the explanation of wealth in his book the Wealth of Nations. Poor and Poverty Laws affected all the outcomes of life including employment, wages, housing, medicine, education etc. If you were born poor it was highly likely that you were going to die poor. It made a huge impact on the way of living, only living on the bare minimum to support family. Between the late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth century the poor rate quadrupled. One in every five people were poor and the wealth of positions were rising. Poverty was acknowledged and in despair condition by the