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The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby galacticsurfer » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:16:09

Bean however has a sort of point Mr. Bill.

I just saw the Taleeb interview on PBS and the globalized overoptimized banking/ trade/ capitalistic system is stretched to the max and bound to collapse according to the Black Swan author basing that on Mandelbrot's mathematics. So a locally flexible small market nonindustrial type of system would offer magnitudes of flexibility for system as we could not quickly reach limits of resources and a collapse in one place would not effect the system somewhere else.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:22:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('venky', 'A') free market system by itself might not lead inevitably to perpetual growth, however, I think that it will always have an inherent pressure to growth, as millions of individual players will always be trying to better themselves, expand their businesses. With no regulation, and ready access to resources it will result in a steady growth in the right circumstances.

Most would agree that too much government regulation is a bad thing and its very harmful for the economy. How about the government only regulates the usuage of scarce and non renewable resources?

But I hate the idea of some bureaucrat liscensing out energy or raw material permits to the industry; that is almost a guarantee of corruption and cronyism.

Another option is trusts that act for the local community. They would not fall under the federal government, but would be responsible to the local community that elects them to safeguard the environment and resources that fall in that area. Any businesses operating in this area would have to pay the necessary fees to operate in that area, corresponding to the resources they use of pollutants they emit. The draw back is that this might not work on the global scale, many communities might choose short term greed over long term care of the environment, and might not really change the status quo.

We could also leave it to the free market. But the consequences of that are pretty clear right now; I dont really need to go into it.

Will individuals themselves be sustainable minded? Not until our culture and value system dramitically changes.

I feel depressed after writing that. :cry:


Economics, dogmatic religion stating that all human behaviour reduces into motives of greed and selfishness, is not science, it's dogma, a cultural aberration. Anthropologists have found out that this system - one based on greed and selfishness - is not the norm among human cultures, but aberration. E.g. gift systems are - or were - very widespread, giving gifts without waiting for anything in return was the way for high social esteem - the "poorest" (who gave most gifts) was the coolest guy in the tribe.

Looking at how this cancer like globalized culture is indeed depressing - because it is self destructive and hideously ugly. But in your heart, even though you are still living at least partly as a member of this culture and depend on it in many ways, in your heart, are you sustainable minded or not, however difficult that will be to put into practice? If you are, that is a great source of joy for both of us! :)
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:33:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('yesplease', 'W')e need government, business, and individal input.


Why do YOU need those? Do not include all of us in your "we". :)
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:35:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('galacticsurfer', 'B')ean however has a sort of point Mr. Bill.

I just saw the Taleeb interview on PBS and the globalized overoptimized banking/ trade/ capitalistic system is stretched to the max and bound to collapse according to the Black Swan author basing that on Mandelbrot's mathematics. So a locally flexible small market nonindustrial type of system would offer magnitudes of flexibility for system as we could not quickly reach limits of resources and a collapse in one place would not effect the system somewhere else.


No, MrBean does not have a point. See my original post. No system - whether it is a natural system or a financial system - can exist without inputs. Therefore the Folly of Growth is a piece of crap the same as Small is Beautiful misses the point.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Production = turning inputs into outputs

Infinite growth = production X time itself.

No system can sustain itself without new inputs. Stop growing and you die.

Thanks eggheads!

Now go tell the unwashed masses that its nothing but diminishing returns from here to eternity (or die-off whichever comes first).

Goofballs! ; - ))



If we do not produce enough food to feed ourselves we die. Period. Food production requires inputs - land, labor, fertilizer, seed, etc. - to create food which is an output. Food, shelter, heat and clothing require inputs. Labor requires inputs. Inputs are needed for output. Output is production. Production over time is needed to sustain life. Therefore, growth can either be doing something more efficiently (fewer inputs to output); producing growth (more output to inputs); or steady growth (sustainable productions) over time. Sustainable growth over time is the goal.

I am finished wasting my time with posters that do not understand Economics 101 much less those that equate global financial imbalances such as discussed by Taleeb in Black Swan - which by the way is not a Black Swan event becaue the global imbalances themselves were perfectly identifiable, and central bankers, policy makers and academics publicly fretted about them for years - so they were not some tsunami like event that could not be predicted ahead of time, but a natural outcome of those imbalances. It was more a case of assigning a probability to the outcome rather than pretending it could or never would happen.

To skip directly from pretending we do not need growth to making valid criticisms about over-stretched, and therefore vulnerable financial models, in one step, while dismissing economics as a dogmatic religion based on a fundamental belief in greed and selfishness is MrBean being a complete wanker.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:44:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')rBean you do not understand economics, but I assume from your posts that you have an intimate knowledge of wanking. Stick to what you know best.


I haven't wanked for a fortnight. Even the best has to take a rest. :P

And I do comprehend economics beyond your pitifull capabilities of imagination, as comprehension includes all meaningfull viewpoints both in- and outside plus good sense of proportion plasing economics as part of larger wholes. All you understand about economics is your robot like manipulation techie skills as part of the machine. The skills that failed, you pity-poor monkey wrench.

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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby retiredguy » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:54:36

Lots of talk about sustainability. Isn't any activity that requires the use of fossil fuels non-sustainable? For that matter, is mineral extraction, even without FF, sustainable?

Continuing growth, it seems to me, absolutely requires extraction of fossil fuels and minerals. That is a road to certain destruction.

A purely sustainable economy is not possible at current population levels. At least not without a die-off. But isn't that what is going to happen inevitably?
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby dohboi » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:55:56

Hey, nobodypanic, welcome to cubes ignore list. You committed the unforgivable sin of asking him a reasonably question. He just can't tolerate that kind of behavior.

Really, he is the least mature poster I have ever seen on these forums, and that is saying quite a bit. Soon he will be telling you that you can't post anything because he can't read it!!!

What a total dweeb.

Mr. Bill is among the smartest people on this forum, but like many very smart people I know and know of, he operates within a fairly narrow intellectual framework. People completely inside an ideology can rarely see it as an ideology, even really smart people.

Time to get back to wanking. ;-)
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 09:59:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')If we do not produce enough food to feed ourselves we die. Period. Food production requires inputs - land, labor, fertilizer, seed, etc. - to create food which is an output. Food, shelter, heat and clothing require inputs. Labor requires inputs. Inputs are needed for output.

Output is production. Production over time is needed to sustain life. Therefore, growth can either be doing something more efficiently (fewer inputs to output); producing growth (more output to inputs); or steady growth (sustainable productions) over time. Sustainable growth over time is the goal.


First of all, we do not produce food. Nature does, as a whole, including our humble part-taking in Mother Nature.

To think that "we produce" food is the techno-hubris of imagining ourselves above the nature, wannabe-gods in place of God/Nature. It's what cancer dreams inside an human organism, loosing touch with reality and existence as harmonious organ of a larger whole.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby galacticsurfer » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 10:26:30

Growth and death are natural biological processes. Life forms take their substance form non-living resources which reorganize into a higher order, from a static to a life system. So life brings a higher order by taking inputs and making outputs continuously. This is the nature of life. No cell is the same as 7 years ago in a human body although you are the same person. But each life form has an age limit and dies and reproduces adn the cycle continues. We have managed to find the massive FF deposits and fill the petri dish with ourselves, creating overshoot. Onetime production of humans-detritus based production- which must go into reverse when detritus is gone. Economics and math describe and model natural phenomena in human social and other systems, open and closed. That statistics were an inadequate description/model of market beahviour by the market participants and that chaos theroy/fractals are a more complete, higher level form of mathematics(like Newton compared to Einstein) is fairly certain. Sicne the stockbrokers were using lower level math they did not expect the market brake up as only gradual change is expected in the framework of statistical significance, like an insurance salesman. At any rate the market was caught by surprise as they don't think very deeply. Infinite linear growth in a closed earth system is impossible but sustainable cyclical growth and earth is entirely likely.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby TonyPrep » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 14:52:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')rBean you do not understand economics
Does anyone? Look at the world's leaders running around like headless chickens, listen to the economists who state that the market has now stabilised and is working normally ... the day before they take another dive down 10% or another rocket up 10%.

Perhaps no-one understands it because it is a fantasy world.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 15:05:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')rBean you do not understand economics
Does anyone? Look at the world's leaders running around like headless chickens, listen to the economists who state that the market has now stabilised and is working normally ... the day before they take another dive down 10% or another rocket up 10%.

Perhaps no-one understands it because it is a fantasy world.


I do understand at least that with consquent dive downs of 10% and rocket ups of 10% you have a bear market. :)
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby TonyPrep » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 15:06:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'N')o system - whether it is a natural system or a financial system - can exist without inputs. Therefore the Folly of Growth is a piece of crap the same as Small is Beautiful misses the point.
The earth has inputs, Mr Bean. It's those inputs that sustain a habitable planet. The articles are not crap because those inputs are limited.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'T')herefore, growth can either be doing something more efficiently (fewer inputs to output); producing growth (more output to inputs); or steady growth (sustainable productions) over time. Sustainable growth over time is the goal.
Efficiencies have limits. Sustainable growth is an oxymoron.

What on earth is "steady growth"? Sustainable production is not growth, it is producing on the fixed resource budget that the earth and sun provide. Aside from occasional efficiency improvements, that means no growth.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 15:10:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')rBean you do not understand economics
Does anyone?


Just came to mind, who really wants to stand under economics when the sky that was its limit is falling down? ;)

Comprehension beats under-standing. :)
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 16:13:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')If we do not produce enough food to feed ourselves we die. Period. Food production requires inputs - land, labor, fertilizer, seed, etc. - to create food which is an output. Food, shelter, heat and clothing require inputs. Labor requires inputs. Inputs are needed for output.

Output is production. Production over time is needed to sustain life. Therefore, growth can either be doing something more efficiently (fewer inputs to output); producing growth (more output to inputs); or steady growth (sustainable productions) over time. Sustainable growth over time is the goal.


First of all, we do not produce food. Nature does, as a whole, including our humble part-taking in Mother Nature.

To think that "we produce" food is the techno-hubris of imagining ourselves above the nature, wannabe-gods in place of God/Nature. It's what cancer dreams inside an human organism, loosing touch with reality and existence as harmonious organ of a larger whole.


Wir sind nicht kuehe!
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby Alcassin » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 16:42:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('venky', 'I') posed this question before: Can we have a free market system, if growth ends?


We can have although it will be defended by massive armies imho.

What free-marketer economists always underline is "with higher wave all the boats are going up", so the growth is only way to deal with poverty. Instead of redistributing pie they always support baking bigger pie.
It's the only way orthodox free-marketers deal with poverty.
Growth.
If it doesn't work?
Then more markets and more growth.

I don't think it's possible to grow pie on finite ingriedients, but you know bread can be bigger with special ingriedients (but has more bigger bubbles inside).

With no growth how is it possible to mantain huge economic gaps in individual countries? This is very tough question, because we were all told that economy is not a zero-sum game. So when it is really-sum game - with no chances to increase supply. Then the entrance on the market will be highly limited due to absolute scarcity of resources.

Now think about current values our developed societies hold - egoism, greed, consumptionism, rat races, and will to power. Now try put on this infantile society a kind of growth barrier we talk about.

How the pricing mechanism would behave in that matter?
There is limited entrance on the market, the price of every product may go up under conditions we know, and this will rise the cost of living. Rising cost of living may ultimately cause the war, as our population is growing.
Last edited by Alcassin on Tue 28 Oct 2008, 17:06:58, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 16:55:15

Alcassin, you're so drunk! Man, read what you just wrote tomorrow. Too funny! Good night.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby Alcassin » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 17:12:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'A')lcassin, you're so drunk! Man, read what you just wrote tomorrow. Too funny! Good night.


Sometimes horrible, sometimes funny. Thanks :)

Anyway tell me MrBill price of wood on Eastern Island? Or any agricultural product. What do you think?
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 17:21:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')If we do not produce enough food to feed ourselves we die. Period. Food production requires inputs - land, labor, fertilizer, seed, etc. - to create food which is an output. Food, shelter, heat and clothing require inputs. Labor requires inputs. Inputs are needed for output.

Output is production. Production over time is needed to sustain life. Therefore, growth can either be doing something more efficiently (fewer inputs to output); producing growth (more output to inputs); or steady growth (sustainable productions) over time. Sustainable growth over time is the goal.


First of all, we do not produce food. Nature does, as a whole, including our humble part-taking in Mother Nature.

To think that "we produce" food is the techno-hubris of imagining ourselves above the nature, wannabe-gods in place of God/Nature. It's what cancer dreams inside an human organism, loosing touch with reality and existence as harmonious organ of a larger whole.


Wir sind nicht kuehe!


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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Oct 2008, 18:08:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Alcassin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'A')lcassin, you're so drunk! Man, read what you just wrote tomorrow. Too funny! Good night.


Sometimes horrible, sometimes funny. Thanks :)

Anyway tell me MrBill price of wood on Eastern Island? Or any agricultural product. What do you think?

Easter Island is a cautionary tale. If we do nothing, it is the default option. But we should be clear, the disaster that was Easter Island was not caused by economic growth or a market economy. They cut down trees to erect religious monuments of no economic value. They did not trade their monument building skills. I take your point. I really do. My point is to make the decisions that do not result in another Easter Island on a grander scale. I am losing the battle. Not because I do not know the problems. Or the solutions. But because no one is acting on good advice. We have serious environmental, and by default economic and social, problems because we have not addressed the sustainability issue. I believe in market solutions. Others think the state knows better. I disagree. Strongly.
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Re: The Folly of Growth - New Scientist

Unread postby yesplease » Wed 29 Oct 2008, 01:10:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('yesplease', 'W')e need government, business, and individal input.


Why do YOU need those? Do not include all of us in your "we". :)
Unfortunately you're included in "we" unles you have no measurable impact on anything. Ideally, yes, people could somehow magically live in a bubble, only interacting in the ways they want to interact, and I bet fossil fuel owners as well as others responsible for externalized costs would love for it to be that easy. Unfortunately, the real world tends to intrude on day dreaming like this, and insuring that we can survive is something we all need to address. :-D
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Professor Membrane', ' ')Not now son, I'm making ... TOAST!
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