Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Impossibility of Growth
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostThis is all good, but my calculation was about inorganic thrash. And residential waste only. I didn't even include industrial residue from lucrative activity.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Kidicious View Post**** philosophy dude. I think I see what your problem is. In the US we have low population density. That means we won't be knee deep in our own garbage. They maybe knee deep in their own garbage in China one day. Good cause they suck!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostThis is all good, but my calculation was about inorganic thrash. And residential waste only. I didn't even include industrial residue from lucrative activity.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
Comment
-
Originally posted by AAAAAAAAH! View PostAll of which is tiny relative to the value of the game. Thanks for playing
Very few products in % of the world's economy are sold for the sake of the numerical information they contain. Our existence is material and most products we need are.
Even if it were, the information contained in a product is the result of labor. And guess what people do when they think, compose or type?
Yes you guessed it. They consume material resources. Coffee cups, electronics, paper, etc.
This is the reason why we are consuming more and more resources, even though output per unit of raw material is higher than it has ever been. Profit is invested in activities that externalize costs.
Let's say that I'm Sid Meier and my time is worth $1000/hour. I can throw the styrofoam cup away (5 seconds) or clean it (2 minutes). Obviously throwing it away is the more profitable option. So in the end, the profit generated by my intellectual activity goes to paying someone else to extract the resources.
Whatever it is that we do, the cycle always begin at the raw material extraction facility.
If you understand this, you can understand the OP.In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostYou're stupid.
Very few products in % of the world's economy are sold for the sake of the numerical information they contain. Our existence is material and most products we need are.
Even if it were, the information contained in a product is the result of labor. And guess what people do when they think, compose or type?
Yes you guessed it. They consume material resources. Coffee cups, electronics, paper, etc.
This is the reason why we are consuming more and more resources, even though output per unit of raw material is higher than it has ever been. Profit is invested in activities that externalize costs.
Let's say that I'm Sid Meier and my time is worth $1000/hour. I can throw the styrofoam cup away (5 seconds) or clean it (2 minutes). Obviously throwing it away is the more profitable option. So in the end, the profit generated by my intellectual activity goes to paying someone else to extract the resources.
Whatever it is that we do, the cycle always begin at the raw material extraction facility.
If you understand this, you can understand the OP.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostPhrased differently, information has value because it can be traded for material resources.
Dematerialization is an illusion.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostRead #413
The reality is we have a very good renewable external energy source (the sun) that has directly or indirectly powered the vast majority of what we've done throughout human history. We have tools that can be powered directly or indirectly by the sun (biological processes). We have the ability to modify organisms.
GMO is the solution to the waste problem, not the problem you want to view it as.
The reality is that decay happens quite fast, especially when you want to promote it. I have some reddish dust that used to be bent nails. Yah, I've bought a hundred kilos of nails or so the past 5 years. That doesn't mean I have a hundred kilos of nails now ... or that there is 100 kilos of steel now missing from the world.
If we focus on producing things which are easily decayed ... especially things which provide valuable output when decayed (organic matter->methane, soil amendments for example) then we can continue to grow even in material wealth for a long time.
Immaterial wealth has little little in the way of material limits. Services as well have little to no material waste. They can grow essentially indefinitely.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostPhrased differently, information has value because it can be traded for material resources.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostThis is the myth people keep repeating themselves to deny the obvious.
This is false. We just keep using up more and more resources.
Think about it a little bit. Why is information valuable? Very often because it allows you to make a product that makes another one obsolete.
Comment
Comment