Be the First to Know
Groups
771
Exploring solutions presented in our special July/August issue on Appalachia
1,204
Bowdoin College's Phil Camill offers a fresh perspective to the issues surrounding environmental change.
879
This is the University of Vermont Solutions Group. We are based in and around Burlington, VT.






What a wonderful talk and essay. I note, especially, these sentences: "And having such a vision alive in me prevents me from selling out to ...a vision of perpetual economic growth, which is pretty much the vision that the entire field of economics gives us. Growth isn’t what I want. Growth has nothing to do with what I want. And I think that the only reason growth—which is a terribly abstract and, when you think about it, stupid vision of the future—can be sold so easily in every policy arena is that there’s no alternative vision."
My own humble efforts together together with economist/planner Michael Oden's to help fill out Meadows' vision can be found in a paper with the self-explanatory title: "Better Is Better Than More: Complexity, Economic Progress, and Qualitative Growth."
The intuition is in line with Herman Daly's: Our economies can "grow" sustainably and indefinitely by substituting quality for quantity: quality is a manifestation of evolutionary complexity, which can increase independent of material and energic input. Complexity is the space into which economies can grow indefinitely, as biological nature already has for billions of years.
For a more comprehensive account, please go to http://soa.utexas.edu/files/csd/wps201101.pdf, which Herman Daly has called "important work."