HENRY CAREY AND ERASMUS PESHINE SMITH’S ECONOMIC PRINCIPLE: INCREASING HUMAN POPULATION

The British Imperial idea that the difference between man and animal is a matter of degrees, and that man is merely an improved form of animal is categorically incorrect; animal behavior is not human behavior. During the last 6,000 years of history most human beings were considered as “intelligent cattle.” It was Lyndon LaRouche who fully understood that creativity was the most profound difference that God had created to differentiate man from the animal, because that difference is based on the power of increasing potential relative population-density. The law governing the increase of human population is, therefore, based on the law which governs the production of unlimited new ideas in science, and in artistic composition, whose purpose is to improve the universe as a whole; and, ironically, that is also the principle which governs the development of galaxies. Thus, as he improves his own humanity, man also produces what is necessary to improve the galaxy as his home.

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2 Replies to “HENRY CAREY AND ERASMUS PESHINE SMITH’S ECONOMIC PRINCIPLE: INCREASING HUMAN POPULATION”

  1. The last 6,000 years? But the Mahabharata and Ramayana give data and even position of observable objects in the sky going back 14,000 years, before the Younger-Dryas that brought the civilization previous (the ones who built the great pyramid) to our to an end 12,400 years ago. Artifacts of this are found all over the globe and under the great ocean.

    • Hi Tony,
      Thanks for your correction of the more appropriate date of 14,000 years for the balance (sophrosyne) of civilized history. You are right, 6,000 years is a pittance; it is merely the limit of my own mental reach, at this moment in time.
      If only our turbulent times were to thrust us into a new height of human civilization, maybe the discovery of how to better relate to all past and future civilization, in the simultaneity of eternity, would help us fuse together all of the common aims of mankind.

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