Abstract

The analysis of multiple past and present anthropogenic crises resulted in a dynamic relationship between the technological potential, the quality of cultural regulators of behavior, and the internal stability of society—the law of technohumanitarian balance. Over the whole human history, this interrelation has served as a mechanism of selecting viable societies and screening decompensated aggressive ones. In the long-term outlook, the blood-shed ratio of society (the ratio of the average number of killings per unit time to the population) has been decreasing rather than increasing with the growth of demographic density and the killing power of weapons.

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