Submitted by Evgeneey t3_10wtl8l in Futurology
First of all, please, sorry for my English.
It's widely discussed, specifically in the "green discourse", both in mainstream media and specialized themed platforms - what is the biggest human population our planet could sustain, feed, provide for life of quality? But I have a bit rarer, reversed question: what's the mininimum population required for preserving all our knowledge, technology, and even progressing further, doing research and implementing results. The world is currently inhabited by some >8 billion souls, but what fraction is required to sustain agriculture and feed the remaining humanity, mining, industry, life professions - doctors and stomatologists to care for our health, but most and for all - progress, science, technology advancement. It's not the question about: what percent of human being we can "evaporate" spontaneously if we want ther remaining to effectively survive, but: what is the number of humans, if carefully selected using, mainly, their education and skills could retain our civilization and move forward. Thank you and once again, sorry for my English. It's not even my second language, but I'm trying to do the best I can in providing understandable communication.
MrGate t1_j7oxpg4 wrote
i feel like the georgia guidestones already said this. whoever had these built spent a lot of money to do so, and most likely probably had a think tank or something to figure out the estimated number of people etc.
i mean lets be honest, for advanced tech per say, not a lot of the population contributes to it. so if you were able to pick and choose who to keep, im sure you could pick enough smart people, enough laborors, and enough people who specialize in medicine etc to continue on humanity in the way it is today!