Feb 24, 2010

Future and Complexity

--For the Understanding of Environmental Economics and Studies Concerned


I believe that man has the power, the intelligence, and the imagination to extricate himself from the serious predicament that now confronts him. The necessary first step toward wise action in the future is to obtain an understanding of the problems that exist. This in turn necessitates an understanding of the relationships between man, his natural environment, and his technology.
                                                            -Ocho Rios, Jamaica, April 1953.

In principle, the vast knowledge we have accumulated during the last 150 years makes it possible for us to look into the future with considerably more accuracy than could Malthus. But in actual fact we are dealing with an extremely complex problem which cuts across all of our major fields of inquiry and which, because of this, is difficult to unravel (to explain something that is difficult to understand or is mysterious) in all of its interlocking aspects. The complexity of the problem, our confusion, and our prejudices, have combined to form a dense fog that has obscured the most important features of the problem from our view - a fog which is in certain respects even more dense than that which existed in Malthus’ time. As a result, the basic factors that are determining the future are not generally known or appreciated.

In spite of the complexity of the problem which confronts us, its overwhelming importance, both to ourselves and to our descendants, warrants our dissecting it as objectively as possible. In doing so we must put aside our hatreds, desires, and prejudices, and look calmly upon the past and present. If we are successful in lifting ourselves from the morass (an unpleasant and complicated situation that is difficult to escape from) of irrelevant fact and opinion and in divorcing ourselves from our preconceived ideas, we will be able to see mankind both in perspective and in relation to his environment. In turn we will be able to appreciate something of the fundamental physical limitations to man’s future development and of the hazards which will confront him in the years and centuries ahead.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Locations of visitors to this page