24 ‘THE SHADOW OF THE WORLD’S FUTURE
the discoveries of methods of combating yellow-fever,
sleeping-sickness, hookworm, malaria, filariasis, etc.,
have rendered many territories much safer for habita-
tion—territories which formerly were so dangerous as
to be virtually uninhabitable. To put the matter
more briefly, advances in medicine and hygiene, by
diminishing the risks of life, and in science and its
applications by increasing human wealth, have already
achieved much in helping the world to carry a con-
siderably larger population. And it is this fact which
appears strikingly in the astonishing collateral advance
of population which has characterised the nineteenth
century—yviz., an annual increase of about six-sevenths
of 1 per cent.
It 1s obvious that, as the world’s population develops,
the actual population-densities in the different regions
tend to approach the population-carrying capacities
under the existing conditions. Since this is inevitable,
the question of the migration of human beings is at
once raised. Behind this, too, lies the measures of
response to the reproductive instinct which are char-
acteristic of different peoples. What is the multiplying
power of various races under the various conditions
that are possible on earth? This, it may be said, is—
as it is in all forms of life—vastly greater than the food-
conditions of the earth will permit to be realised. In
Chapter I we have already seen that rates of increase
recently experienced, could they possibly continue,
would inevitably involve the world in difficulty.
Adequate food-supplies are not possible. Man’s repro-
ductive powers are held in check by what has been
called “ the niggardliness of Nature.” How, we may
ask, does Nature hold in check all undue increase? It
is immediately evident that to answer this we shall
have to make the survey of world-conditions cover
many matters which at first, or on a superficial view,
might have been thought quite irrelevant. In our