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Long-term constraints on human activity

Abstract

Biophysical and other ''outer limits'' of food, land, water, climatic change, stratospheric chemistry, energy, hazardous substances, non-fuel minerals, human stress, and social and ecological stability raise fundamental questions about present trends in management methods and in global organization. The diverse outer limits reflect complex, poorly perceived, and often unsuspected, interconnections between numerous biological and geophysical processes, many of which are obscure or still unknown. Our lack of predictive power, let alone of quantitative understanding, implies a need to treat essential life-support systems with great caution and forbearance, lest we erode safety margins whose importance we do not yet appreciate. Even those outer limits which now seem remote are relevant to present policy, as their timely avoidance may require us to discard otherwise attractive short-term policies in favor of others that offer less immediate advantage but that retain options which may be needed later. Such alternative policies may have to rely more on social than on technical innovation in order to address underlying disequilibria rather than merely palliating their symptoms. Moreover, some outer limits are sufficiently imminent, or require such long lead-times to avoid, that fundamental changes in policy, in institutions, and in the degree of global interdependence, seem necessary if  More>>
Authors:
Publication Date:
Apr 01, 1976
Product Type:
Journal Article
Reference Number:
EDB-77-014277
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Environmental Conservation; Journal Volume: 3; Journal Issue: 1
Subject:
59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES; ENERGY SOURCES; PLANNING; SOCIO-ECONOMIC FACTORS; BEHAVIOR; BIOLOGICAL STRESS; FORECASTING; HUMAN POPULATIONS; MANAGEMENT; POPULATIONS; 550100* - Behavioral Biology
OSTI ID:
7139694
Research Organizations:
Friends of the Earth Ltd., London
Country of Origin:
Switzerland
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: CODEN: EVCNA; ISSN 0376-8929
Submitting Site:
TIC
Size:
Pages: 3-13
Announcement Date:
Jan 01, 1977

Citation Formats

Lovins, A. B. Long-term constraints on human activity. Switzerland: N. p., 1976. Web. doi:10.1017/S0376892900017641.
Lovins, A. B. Long-term constraints on human activity. Switzerland. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892900017641
Lovins, A. B. 1976. "Long-term constraints on human activity." Switzerland. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892900017641.
@misc{etde_7139694,
title = {Long-term constraints on human activity}
author = {Lovins, A. B.}
abstractNote = {Biophysical and other ''outer limits'' of food, land, water, climatic change, stratospheric chemistry, energy, hazardous substances, non-fuel minerals, human stress, and social and ecological stability raise fundamental questions about present trends in management methods and in global organization. The diverse outer limits reflect complex, poorly perceived, and often unsuspected, interconnections between numerous biological and geophysical processes, many of which are obscure or still unknown. Our lack of predictive power, let alone of quantitative understanding, implies a need to treat essential life-support systems with great caution and forbearance, lest we erode safety margins whose importance we do not yet appreciate. Even those outer limits which now seem remote are relevant to present policy, as their timely avoidance may require us to discard otherwise attractive short-term policies in favor of others that offer less immediate advantage but that retain options which may be needed later. Such alternative policies may have to rely more on social than on technical innovation in order to address underlying disequilibria rather than merely palliating their symptoms. Moreover, some outer limits are sufficiently imminent, or require such long lead-times to avoid, that fundamental changes in policy, in institutions, and in the degree of global interdependence, seem necessary if we are to live to enjoy some of the later and more interesting limits to human activity.}
doi = {10.1017/S0376892900017641}
journal = []
issue = {1}
volume = {3}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Switzerland}
year = {1976}
month = {Apr}
}