When Paul Erlich studied butterflies as an environmental role model in the 1950s to answer questions about taxonomy, ecology and evolution, Paul Erlich began considering the global population. Since then, he has become one of the world's leading experts on population problems, and in 1968 he writes more than 30 authors and co-authors of books on population and environment, including his most famous "population bomb" ( USC 1). Erlich is also a coauthor and founder of co-evolutionary theory and field.
After the publication of "Population Bomb" (Ehrlich 1968) and the first "Earth Day" by Paul Erlich, the population became an environmental problem from the late 1960s to the early 1970s. However, over 30 years ago, due to at least three factors, most of the population seems to be excluded from the agenda of the environmental movement. (Ii) the political control of the White House and Congress in the United States, mainly the anti-environmental environment, (iii) the United States of America to deal with biodiversity and climate change Priority shift in environmental movement Direct threat
When Paul Erlich studied butterflies as an environmental role model in the 1950s to answer questions about taxonomy, ecology and evolution, Paul Erlich began considering the global population. Since then, he has become one of the world's leading experts on population problems, and in 1968 he writes more than 30 authors and co-authors of books on population and environment, including his most famous "population bomb" ( USC 1). - Huckleberry Finn: A good example "Huckleberry Finn Adventures" is a visual show of the life of author Samuel Clemens. He explained his feelings about his life through the eyes of a little boy named Huckleberry Finn. Huckleberry Finn has lots of adventures and can teach me the lessons of life I can learn today. I have another view as to whether Huckfin is a good role model for today's youth, but I will explain why he thinks so