The Bomb That Didn't Explode

没有爆炸的炸弹

Hidden Brain

社会科学

2020-03-10

35 分钟
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We know that we live in an ever-changing world, but one thing we often overlook is demographic change. Whether the world's population is growing or shrinking can affect many aspects of our lives, from the number of kids we have to the likelihood that we'll live to old age. This week on Hidden Brain, we explore how our planet's population is changing, and what that means for us in the century to come.
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  • From NPR.

  • This is hidden brain.

  • I'm Shankar Vedantam.

  • In the summer of 1968, a scientist created a small metal room at the National Institute of Mental Health in Maryland.

  • It was known as Universe 25, and if you got close enough, you could hear its eight tiny inhabitants.

  • Mice.

  • Universe 25 was a mouse utopia.

  • There were tunnels to play in and strips of paper to nest in.

  • Food and water were plentiful.

  • There were no diseases to get sick from, no cats to fear, no rain, no snow, no wind.

  • All there was to do was eat, play, and reproduce.

  • And reproducing was key because the scientist, John Calhoun, had a question.

  • What would happen as the population of mice grew larger and the dimensions of the room felt smaller?

  • Would a change in numbers set off a change in behavior?

  • Soon, the mice began to have babies.

  • Then those babies grew up and had their own babies.

  • And those babies grew up and had their own babies, and on and on and on, ballooning from dozens of mice to hundreds of mice to thousands of mice, all crowded together in a nine foot by nine foot metal room, twitching, scampering, screeching.

  • Soon, it didn't feel like a utopia anymore.

  • The details of what happened are disturbing.

  • There were too many young mice and too little space.