Most posts here are a reaction to philosophies which have come down to us through a modern (premodern?) lense; we are entities navigating some kind of reality, and there are abstruse facts—people should understand them, because they are self-evident, however hidden.
In one's limited opinion, there is no way to understand any fact without direct perception. We have become evolved to accept 'seemingness' above actuality. We tend toward the 'right way' not because it is the right way, but because it seems to be so. Seemingness rules over truth, or the 'good', should they be synonymous (truth=good).
Because we live in an increasingly objectified culture, one where people immediately share and spread their intimations about a perception of 'my life is thusly, therego life', it becomes increasingly necessary to abstract and pull back. No, life is not about accomplishments and travel (which is the single token of existence in contemporary life). It is about the negotiation with truth.
But why do we do or perform this? The performance of philosophical norms has to do with the negation of illustrative patterns, such as hubris, illusions, and pride. People tend toward performance, rather than living a truth—which means truth is merely the performance of abstruse negations. In essence, portraying the philosophical pattern is a means of negation, or elimination of a certain kind of obligation. I am happy. Look and see. The end.
Instead of supplying proof of happiness, or satisfaction, they supply a photo imitating such a construct. There is a performance, like a stage-actor, for a camera, which will indicate to the world they have seemingly advanced into some kind of obscure destiny.
All of this needs to be avoided entirely. The spirit of life is not hidden, or behind a wall of unattainable—if performable—content moderation, but under the skin; raw, impassioned joy which cannot be captured or contained by 'sharing'. It has nothing to do with Hegel or Kant. It has no bounds, and its infinite pleasure cannot be expressed.
However, and instead, we seek toward imitation and performance. Even in academic pursuit, one is simply attempting to project their grasp of theories. In a perpetual chain of wording, of jargon, of imitation. The seemingness of 'knowing stuff'.
Truth cannot be grasped theoretically, it is a lived experience, which builds actual character, and supplies life with its inherent meaning, though it cannot be expressed.
You have it in reverse, limited resources actually causes excess population. When there's nothing else to do, people f*ck.
Of course famine and political pressures which lead to that, are a factor. However, the real resource is cultural, it's mental, it's 'potential'. It's freedom to create something new and interesting.
When theology and politics collude, there is an integral degradation of mental resources. People stop thinking, and become drones, bots, npc's. They are stripped of their potential. They react in a variety of ways, one of which is the enslavement of women for the function of reproductive activity—which we might owe a debt of gratitude toward.
Summarily, the darkness born of ideological theology (as opposed to cultural theology, which binds people together informally), leads to population booms, and as a product of last resort, people reproduce as a means of coping, without the accompanying intention of reproduction...
The most stable demographic regions of this world are also the least economically developed. As an example.