Here are entered works on the theory that the initial effect of modernization in human societies is a growing margin of births over deaths and an accelerating rate of population growth, and that at a later stage of socioeconomic development the size of the family is reduced by birth control and the birth rate falls, eventually reducing the rate of population growth
Vital signs -- Textbooks : Vital sign measurement across the lifespan / Jennifer L. Lapum, Margaret Verkuyl, Wendy Garcia, Oona St-Amant, and Andy Tan ; 2nd Canadian edition H5P contributors, Kymberley Bontinen, Barbara Metcalf, Lee-Anne Stephen, Michelle Hughes, Margaret Verkuyl
Vital statistics -- Fees -- Law and legislation -- Great Britain -- Early works to 1800 : An abstract of the Act (made in anno vi°. & vii°. Gulielmi III. Regis) : for granting to His Majesty certain duties upon marriages, births & burials, and upon batchelours and widowers, for the term of five years ; as also the act for explaining and regulating several doubts, &c. in the late act upon vellum, &c
1695
1
Vital statistics -- History : Facts of life : the social construction of vital statistics, Ontario, 1869-1952 / George Emery
Vitalism -- psychology : The early history of embodied cognition 1740-1920 : the Lebenskraft-debate and radical reality in German science, music, and literature / edited by John A. McCarthy, Stephanie M. Hilger, Heather I. Sullivan, Nicholas Saul
The metaphysical doctrine that the functions and processes of life are due to a vital principle distinct from physicochemical forces and that the laws of physics and chemistry alone cannot explain life functions and processes. Vitalism is opposed to mechanistic materialism. The belief was that matter was divided into two classes based on behavior with respect to heat: organic and inorganic. Inorganic material could be melted but could always be recovered by removing the heat source. Organic compounds changed form upon heating and could not be recovered by removing the heat source. The proposed explanation for the difference between organic and inorganic compounds was the Vitalism Theory, which stated that inorganic materials did not contain the "vital force" of life