Quotes from Herman E. Daly
Malthus has been buried many times, and Malthusian scarcity with him. But as Garrett Hardin remarked, anyone who has to be reburied so often cannot be entirely dead.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Reproduction is more pleasurable than death.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Growth chestnuts have to be placed on the unyielding anvil of biophysical realities and then crushed with the hammer of moral argument.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Reproduction is more pleasurable than death.
~ Herman E. Daly
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There is something fundamentally wrong in treating the Earth as if it were a business in liquidation.
~ Herman E. Daly
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The economy is a wholly owned subsidiary of the environment, not the reverse.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Even if we could grow our way out of the crisis and delay the inevitable and painful reconciliation of virtual and real wealth, there is the question of whether this would be a wise thing to do. Marginal costs of additional growth in rich countries, such as global warming, biodiversity loss and roadways choked with cars, now likely exceed marginal benefits of a little extra consumption. The end result is that promoting further economic growth makes us poorer, not richer.
~ Herman E. Daly
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If nonsatiety were the natural state of human nature then aggressive want-stimulating advertising would not be necessary, nor would the barrage of novelty aimed at promoting dissatisfaction with last year's model. The system attempts to remake people to fit its own presuppositions. If people's wants are not naturally insatiable we must make them so, in order to keep the system going.
~ Herman E. Daly
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While the invisible hand looks after the private sector, the invisible foot kicks the public sector to pieces.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Malthus has been buried many times, and Malthusian scarcity with him. But as Garrett Hardin remarked, anyone who has to be reburied so often cannot be entirely dead.
~ Herman E. Daly
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The individualism of current economic theory is manifest in the purely self-interested behavior it generally assumes. It has no real place for fairness, malevolence, and benevolence, nor for the preservation of human life or any other moral concern.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Environmental degradation is an iatrogenic disease induced by economic physicians who treat the basic malady of unlimited wants by prescribing unlimited growth.... Yet one certainly does not cure a treatment-induced disease by increasing the treatment dosage.
~ Herman E. Daly
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The problem with the World Bank has to do with development - the spreading of Western over-consumption worldwide.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Future progress simply must be made in terms of the things that really count rather than the things that are merely countable.
~ Herman E. Daly
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The economy has gotten bigger, the ecosystem has not. How big has the economy become relative to the ecosystem?
~ Herman E. Daly
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Only in the last 200 years have we become dependent on nonrenewable minerals. Modern industry runs on the scarcest of the available forms of low entropy. Traditional technology (windmills, waterwheels, etc.) runs on the more abundant solar source. How ironic, therefore, to be told by technological optimists that modern technology is freeing man from dependence on resources (Barnett and Morse, 1963, p. 11). The very opposite is true.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Growth economics gave technology free rein. Steady-state economics channels technical progress in the socially benign directions of small scale, decentralization, increased durability of products, and increased long-run efficiency in the use of scarce resources.
~ Herman E. Daly
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Boundary-oriented stability tends to minimize future regrets rather than maximize present satisfaction.
~ Herman E. Daly
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