The Fertility of the Unfit by W. A. (William Allan) Chapple
page 34 of 133 (25%)
page 34 of 133 (25%)
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own intellectual development, the more his sexual system suffers, and
the less vigorous his sexual instincts. And the converse of this is also true, for examples of those with great sexual powers are numerous. In plant life, this same law is also in operation. If one system in a plant, the woody fibre for instance, takes on abundant growth, the fruit is starved and is less in quality and quantity, and _vice versa_. But to what extent does this affect fertility? Sexual power and fertility are not synonymous terms. The vast profusion of seed in plant and animal life, would allow of an enormous reduction in the amount produced, without the least affecting fertility. Even admitting the application of Spencer's law to sexual vitality, and allowing him to claim that, with the progress of "individuation," there is a decline in sexual instinct, would the fertility of the race be affected thereby? To have any effect at all on the birth-rate, the instinct would have either to be killed or to be so reduced in intensity as to stop marriage, or to delay it till very late in life. When once marriage was contracted sexual union once in every two years, would, under strictly normal conditions, result in a very large family. For according to Mr. Spencer's theory, it is the instinct that is weakened not the power of the spermatozoa to fertilize. |
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