From: Robin Hanson (hanson@econ.berkeley.edu)
Date: Fri Nov 06 1998 - 15:07:23 MST
'gene writes:
> > 1) It is not clear that demand can ever be "saturated."
>
>Beyond the classical economics context, I think that is very well
>possible. Albeit it is difficult to compare 'demands' from the
>economical and ecological (say, tropical rainforest) domain,
>in the latter's case the material and energy streams are clearly
>finite (=stagnated at a high level). I think this is also
>applicable to any system with a finite matterenergy concentration,
>which fairly covers them all.
I think you are confusing supply with demand. You describe a
case where supply is finite, but this doesn't mean demand
is saturated. If you expanded that domain, the animals would
expand as well, demonstrated that their demand for territory
is *not* saturated.
> > 4) The growth *rate* seems crucial. Something that doubled
> > every twenty years seems pretty uninteresting.
>
>Only if compared to things that are growing faster.
Yes, I was comparing them to the world economy, which is growing
faster. To us, a slower growing process which starts nearby
and starts much smaller is just not interesting.
Robin Hanson
hanson@econ.berkeley.edu http://hanson.berkeley.edu/
RWJF Health Policy Scholar FAX: 510-643-8614
140 Warren Hall, UC Berkeley, CA 94720-7360 510-643-1884
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