About This Book
An extended essay contends that vice operates as a functional mechanism that compensates for nature's overproduction by eliminating excess and unfit individuals. Drawing on natural history and evolutionary ideas, it compares animal fecundity and predation with human immunity from natural enemies, and argues that social vices and self-destructive behaviors effectively perform the population-limiting role absent in humanity. It examines implications for social policy, moral judgment, and the selection of those deemed surplus, warning that public sentiment complicates any deliberate system of exclusion while describing vice as an inevitable, if troubling, corrective.
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