quote:
Enlightenment ideals of equality? Or fundamentalist bigotry?
Not mutually exclusive: You can foster ideals while confronting bigotry. Humanistic ideals that celebrate man's intellect must also recognize the downside of the human condition: we lie, cheat, and hurt each other in some measure that will never be totally eradicated. Tribalism is another human tendency, the root of bigotry and balkanization. These problems (if you agree they're problems!) are known to be somehow "hard-wired" in our collective brains (our DNA for that matter) making them intractable problems.
Overpopulation is the biggest problem facing the world. If we only had to allocate the world's resources among, say, 3 billion people instead of the present 6, then life would be a lot easier for everybody while our species would remain biologically robust.
Overpopulation is overcome by educating people, making them aware. The catch-22 is that good education is virtually impossible in an overcrowded society. Universal public education is a luxury only affordable by industrialized nations, with no guarantee of quality (look at the U.S. in recent decades!). But once you educate children to read and write, reason logically, always remain curious about things, and help but not hurt others, then humanistic ideals will be closer to realization.
Civilized life is tough, and it's keeps getting tougher. Morality is a luxury for people who are not starving -- or under attack. We can try to regulate population size and health, establish economic stability, manage resources, behave by rule of law, and use all the other trappings of modern industrialized democratic nations. Yet overpopulation amidst depleted resources would seem to be humanity's forseeable doom. Kind of a giant stop sign for our big brains.

Religion is a rather seductive "hard-wired" universal social tendency (a highly successful "meme", as Richard Dawkins might say). Karl Marx famously described religion as the "opium of the masses" (or was that Harpo?

) It comforts our fear of death and offers answers to spiritual questions, but is closed to alternatives. Converted masses have arisen many times in history, and presumably always will.
The problem with religion, especially with fundamentalist sects, is its negative effects on education and population control. Education suffers when the collective wisdom of the world, such as science and history, is rejected in favor of holy scripture or other rigid tradition. Overpopulation results from a religious mandate to go forth and procreate (that one's not too difficult to preach

) and an ignorant populace doing what comes naturally.
So if we could break the cycle of overpopulation leading to poverty to ignorance to easy recruitment into large, cultish religious sects to more overpopulation, we might have room for optimism. Today I'm a pessimist.
quote:
Almost all of the 1,000 residents are descendants of about six men.
Popularly known as "the shallow end of the gene pool"
