The wealth of nature : how mainstream economics has failed the environment

Robert L. Nadeau

Virtually all large-scale damage to the global environment is caused by economic activities, and the vast majority of economic planners in both business and government coordinate these activities on the basis of guidelines and prescriptions from neoclassical economic theory. In this hard-hitting book, Robert Nadeau demonstrates that the claim that neoclassical economics is a science comparable to the physical sciences is totally bogus and that our failure to recognize and deal with this fact constitutes the greatest single barrier to the timely resolution of the crisis in the global environment. Neoclassical economic theory is premised on the belief that the "invisible hand" -- Adam Smith's metaphor for forces associated with the operation of the "natural laws of economics" -- regulates the workings of market economies. Nadeau reveals that Smith's understanding of these laws was predicated on assumptions from eighteenth-century metaphysics and that the creators of neoclassical economics incorporated this view of the "lawful" mechanisms of free-market systems into a mathematical formalism borrowed wholesale from mid-nineteenth-century physics. The strategy used by these economists, all of whom had been trained as engineers, was as simple as it was absurd -- they substituted economic variables for the physical variables in the equations of this physics. Strangely enough, this claim was widely accepted and the fact that neoclassical economics originated in a bastardization of mid-nineteenth-century physics was soon forgotten. Nadeau makes a convincing case that the myth that neoclassical economic theory is a science has blinded us to the fact that there is absolutely no basis in this theory for accounting for the environmental impacts of economic activities or for positing viable economic solutions to environmental problems. The unfortunate result is that the manner in which we are now coordinating global economic activities is a program for ecological disaster, and we may soon arrive at the point where massive changes in the global environment will threaten the lives of billions of people. To avoid this prospect, Nadeau argues that we must develop and implement an environmentally responsible economic theory and describes how this can be accomplished.

「Nielsen BookData」より

[目次]

  • Introduction1. Spaceship Earth: Homo economicus and the Environmental Crisis2. The Not So Worldly Philosophers: Metaphysics, Newtonian Physics, and Classical Economics3. The Emperor Has No Clothes: The Neoclassical Economists and Mid-Nineteenth Century Physics4. No Free Lunch: Mainstream Economics and Globalization5. A Green Thumb on the Invisible Hand: Environmental Economics6. Schisms, Heresies, and Keeping the Faith: Ecological Economics7. The Real Economy in Biology: Emergence and a New View of Order8. The Real Economy in Physics: Cosmic Connections9. Toward a New Theory of Economics: The Costs of Doing Business in the Global Environment10. The Ceremony of Innocence: Science, Ethics, and the Environmental Crisis

「Nielsen BookData」より

この本の情報

書名 The wealth of nature : how mainstream economics has failed the environment
著作者等 Nadeau, Robert
Nadeau Robert L.
出版元 Columbia University Press
刊行年月 c2003
ページ数 xii, 253 p.
大きさ 24 cm
ISBN 0231127995
0231127987
NCID BA62918972
※クリックでCiNii Booksを表示
言語 英語
出版国 アメリカ合衆国
この本を: 
このエントリーをはてなブックマークに追加

このページを印刷

外部サイトで検索

この本と繋がる本を検索

ウィキペディアから連想