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CULTURAL CARRYING CAPACITY:
A biological approach to human problems
by Garrett Hardin
Science, like all human institutions, evolves. Earlier in this century
Einstein probably spoke for most of the scientists of his day when he identified
the inner force that drew him to scientific work: "I believe with Schopenhauer
that one of the strongest motives that lead men to art and science is [the
desire to] escape from everyday life with its painful crudity and hopeless
dreariness, from the fetters of one's own evershifting desires. A finely
tempered nature longs to escape from personal life into the world of objective
perception and thought" (Einstein 1935).
Then came the Second World War and the Manhattan Project, culminating
on 6 August 1945 with the announcement of the bombing of Hiroshima. Almost
overnight scientists realized they could no longer escape becoming involved
with the "crudities" of the world. In December of the same year, with Einstein's
blessing, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists was founded to explore
the human implications of scientific discoveries. From the day of its founding,
this bulletin has, in the best and truest sense, been a controversial journal.
Never again would the escapism of a Schopenhauer be quite so attractive
to scientists.
Biologists preceded the physicists in discovering the social perils
of pursuing science wherever it might lead. By mid-nineteenth century it
was obvious that there were overlaps between the territories claimed by
biologists and theologians. Peace-lovers tried to establish a demilitarized
zone between two tribes, but it didn't work. In 1925 ideological warfare
broke out in Dayton, Tennessee. The legal outcome of the Scopes trial was
ambiguous, though one philosopher, as late as 1982, maintained that "the
evolutionists won a great moral victory" (Ruse 1982). A different conclusion
was reached by the biologist and evolutionist, H. J. Muller. Thirty-four
years after the trial, this Nobel laureate noted that the subject of evolution
was almost entirely missing from high school biology textbooks. He concluded
that, practically speaking, biologists had lost the battle in Dayton. On
the centenary of the Origin of Species Muller thundered, "One hundred years
without Darwinism are enough!" (Muller 1959).
The next quarter of a century showed that Muller was no mere viewer-with-alarm
(Nelkin 1977). During this period the "scientific creation" movement was
born. Subsequent successes of the creationists were due in equal measure
to their political skill and to the relative apathy of professional biologists.
Finally biologists became sufficiently disturbed by what was happening
to public education to fight creationists in the courts. Judge William
R. Overton's detailed and thoughtful judgement against the creationists
in Arkansas on 5 January 1982 foretold the end of the creationists' dominance
of the public debate (Montagu 1984).
That is history; but history should never be regarded as mere "water
under the bridge." As Santayana said: "Those who cannot remember the past
are condemned to repeat it" (Santayana 1905). For more than a century,
we biologists failed to do our civic duty by bringing home to the general
public the human significance of evolution through natural selection. That
which we sowed by a century's near total neglect of public education, we
richly reaped in the form of widespread anti-intellectualism fostered by
Bible-worshipping fundamentalists. Biology abounds in insights that call
for a massive restructuring of popular opinions. If the sad history of
Darwinism in the agora is not to be repeated again and again, biologists
must accept the responsibility of bringing their insights to the public.
Among the more important biological concepts crying out for public explication
today is the idea of "carrying capacity." Resistance to exploring its implications
arises in part from the same source as resistance to Darwinism, as illustrated
by the following quotations, one of which predates of the Origin of Species
by more than two decades.
From the beginning of the nineteenth century, evolution (though not
natural selection) was "in the air." In 1837 Cardinal Nicholas Wiseman,
perhaps the most influential Roman Catholic in England, disposed of human
evolution with these words: "It is revolting to think that our noble nature
should be nothing more than the perfecting of the ape's maliciousness"
(Wiener and Noland 1957). Obviously the ground was well prepared for the
rejection of Darwin's ideas long before he wrote his great book. Darwin's
acute awareness of the opposition awaiting his theory no doubt accounted
for much of his long delay in publishing the Origin.
How vigorously that opposition expressed itself is well shown by the
oft-told story of the Huxley-Wilber-force debate (see, interalia, Hardin
1959 and Brent 1981). Less spectacular, but no doubt more typical, was
the reaction of the Victorian lady who, on hearing about Darwin's theory,
expostulated: "Descended from the apes! My dear, we will hope that is not
true. But if it is, let us pray that it may not become generally known!"
(Dobzhansky 1955). It is natural that people committed less to truth than
to the stability of society should prefer taboo to confrontation (Hardin
1978).
In what follows, I shall use the term man in the generic sense, to apply
to any and all members of the human species regardless of sex. When so
used, man is equivalent to the Latin homo rather than vir. This usage is
old-fashioned but, I think, aesthetically preferable to expository hybrids
of personó(as in personholes, an unhappy substitution for manholes).
Even the most casual reading of the Bible shows that man occupies a
very special place in the Judeo-Christian view of the world. Simply put,
Darwin's great contribution to public thought was the idea that man is
an animal. Not one in a thousand of those who reject Darwinism today do
so because they have made a close study of the theory (as laid out, for
instance, in any of the standard university textbooks on Darwinian evolution).
On the contrary, their rejection has its roots in a highly emotional reaction
to the thought that human beings are truly animals, answering to principles
that govern all animals. Yet this assumption is the foundation of all biological
research into the nature of Homo sapiens.
The contrary assumption, as expressed by Cardinal Wiseman and the anonymous
Victorian lady, can be called the hypothesis of human exemptionism, or
exemptionism for short (Catton and Dunlap, 1978). The exemptionist assumes,
without proof, that men (and women) are exempt from important laws that
govern the behavior of other animals. Darwinians do not deny that there
are some aspects in which human beings are unique among animalsófor instance,
in being able to argue about evolution! But Darwinians put the burden of
proof on those who make any particular claim of the uniqueness of man.
At various times in the past man was said to be the only animal that
could use tools, make tools, communicate with others of his kind, or conceptualize.
Soon after each uniqueness was postulated some nonhuman exception was found.
Desperately seeking something unique about their own species, apologists
even looked for less laudable differentia. On various occasions it was
claimed that man was the only animal that made war against his own kind,
or that lied, or that committed murder or rape. But again, as fast as negative
qualities were put forward, animal exemplars were found.
In the end a few unique human abilities were found. (No other animal
conjugates verbs or declines nouns.) But the kinship of man and the animals
(meaning "other animals") remains a fruitful working hypothesis for biologists.
This hypothesis is recommended to scholars of all persuasions as a sovereign
remedy against deceptions engendered by exemptionist thinking. In the end
we find that man is indeed a remarkable animal. There is no need to hamstring
research at the outset by a commitment to exemptionism.
CARRYING CAPACITY IN A NONHUMAN SETTING
The management of herds, both wild and domesticated, rests on the concept
of carrying capacity. A brief account of David R. Klein's classic study
of the reindeer on an Alaskan island will serve to illustrate what carrying
capacity means (Klein 1968).
In 1944 some two dozen reindeer were released on St. Matthew Island
where previously there had been none. Lichens were plentiful and the animals
increased at an average rate of 32% per year for the next 19 years, reaching
a peak of about 6,000 in the year 1963. During the heavy snows of 1963-64
almost all of the animals died, leaving a wretched herd of 41 females and
1 male, all probably sterile. It was not so much the inclement weather
that devastated the herd as it was a deficiency in food resources, a deficiency
that had been brought about by overgrazing.
The carrying capacity of a territory is defined as the maximum number
of animals that can be supported year after year without damage to the
environment. After careful study Klein concluded that 5 reindeer per km2
was the carrying capacity of an unspoiled St. Matthew Island. An animal
census taken in 1957 gave 4 animals per km2. A further 32% increase during
the ensuing year would have brought the population to 5.3 per km2, a transgression
of the carrying capacity. Had the herd been managed (which it was not),
the number would have been kept somewhere near the 1957 size, below 5 per
km2.
In developing a policy for dealing with carrying capacity transgressions
we must answer two questions: (1) How precise a figure is the stated carrying
capacity? and (2) What are the consequences of transgressing the carrying
capacity?
CARRYING CAPACITY ESTIMATES: IMPRECISE BUT IMPORTANT
There is no hope of ever making carrying capacity figures as precise
as, say, the figures for chemical valence or the value of the gravitational
constant. On St. Matthew Island the growth of reindeer moss is no doubt
greater some summers than others. Certainly the availability of lichens
is much less in winter when they must be dug out from under the snow. Then
too there are secular variations in climate: the exceptionally severe winter
of 1963-64 might have been part of a long-term cycle. To these variations
must be added unavoidable variations in expert opinion. As a result, any
particular figure for carrying capacity has a substantial element of the
arbitrary in it. Should we refuse to build policy upon arguable estimates?
What would happen if we ignored all estimates of carrying capacity?
The short answer is disaster. Whenever a population grows beyond the
carrying capacity, the environment is rapidly degraded; as a result, carrying
capacity is reduced in subsequent years. Uncontrolled, the population continues
to grow larger (for awhile) as the carrying capacity grows smaller.
The details of transgression-disasters vary from one situation to another,
but some of the consequences are extremely common. Overexploited edible
plants are replaced by weeds previously rejected by the exploiting herbivores.
Soil that has been laid bare is eroded away; this reduces local productivity
in subsequent years. Soil turned into silt fills reservoirs and clogs irrigation
systems. Loss of the rain-absorbent capability of soils produces faster
runoff after rain, and more devastating floods in lower areas. These effects
are especially severe when forests on steep slopes are destroyed.
The consequences of systematically exceeding the carrying capacity are
serious and, more often than not, irreversible even when the territory
is freed of excess animals. Reversibility may be possible on a geological
time scale of tens of thousands of years, but on the time scale of human
history such long-term reversibility is no cause for complacency. The Tigris-Euphrates
valley, ruined by mismanagement two thousand years ago, is still ruined.
If ecologists were ever asked to write a new Decalogue, their First
Commandment would be: Thou shalt not transgress the carrying capacity (Hardin
1976).
Because transgression is so serious a matter, the conservative approach
is to stay well below the best estimate of carrying capacity. Such a policy
may well be viewed by profit-motivated people as a waste of resources,
but this complaint has no more legitimacy than complaints against an engineer's
conservative estimate of the carrying capacity of a bridge. Even if our
concern is mere profit, in the long run the greatest economic gain comes
from taking safety factors and carrying capacities seriously. Is it not
time to change the meaning of the word conservative to take account of
a new variety, the ecological conservative (Hardin 1985a)? The ecoconservative
knows that time has no stop. Proflt seekers who focus too sharply on the
bottom line of today's ledger book underestimate the consequences of time's
arrow. To the ecologist, bottom line conservatives are not true conservatives.
(Unfortunately bottom line conservatives now fill most of the positions
on the White House staff.)
The ultimate goal of game management is to minimize
the aggregate suffering of animals.
CAPACITY STRATEGY VERSUS SANCTITY STRATEGY
When the numbers of an exploiting herd of animals shoot past the carrying
capacity of their environment, what should concerned human beings do? The
answer is simple: get rid of the excess fast. This is the correct answer
regardless of whether we are primarily concerned with the well being of
the animals themselves, or with human profits to be derived from exploiting
them.
Quite often the simplest and least cruel way to diminish animal numbers
is to shoot the excess. This rational solution has been vigorously opposed
since its espousal by Aldo Leopold in the 1930s (Flader 1974). In state
after state, the public has had to be educated to see the harm that deer
do to themselves when their numbers become too great. Game managers have
been opposed by amateur but publicity-wise "animal lovers" (who will henceforth
be referred to without quotation marks). With the best of intentions, animal
lovers force state agencies to adopt remedies that inevitably lead to more
animal suffering. The ill-advised measures include the following.
WINTER FEEDING. The carrying capacity of the land is usually lower in
winter than in summer. When a population is no longer kept under control
by predators, the numbers rise until there are too many animals to survive
a normal winter. The shipping of food to the herd following winter storms
prevents Nature's harsh but efficacious remedy for overpopulation. When
continued for several seasons, winter feeding produces too many animals
even for the summer season, and the environment is subjected to year-round
degradation.
TRANSPLANTING. Animal lovers, like some economists (Simon 1981), cannot
accept the fact that the world has limits. Whenever the media carry accounts
of starving deer, someone is sure to propose that the animals be forcibly
moved to other areas that, curiously, are assumed to be both suitable and
underpopulated. When such experiments are carried out, the results are
invariably expensive and unsatisfactory.
ADOPTION. Wild horses (really feral horses) in the western United States
tug strongly at the heartstrings of animal lovers. Years of political pressure,
orchestrated by "Wild Horse Annie" Johnston, finally compelled Congress
to pass the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971. This act forbids
private citizens or commercial enterprises to kill, capture, or harass
wild equines on federal lands.
Wild horses increase by about ten percent per year, which means a doubling
of the population every seven years. Unfortunately, the rate of increase
of the grazing lands is a negative number. Something has to give. So the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM 1980) set up an "Adopt A-Horse Program"
to reduce the herds in an acceptable manner. A US resident, after filling
out an application form and paying $200 for a horse or $75 for a burro,
can pick up and transport (at his own expense) an animal to take to his
home property. If the adopter takes care of it in an approved manner for
one year he can then obtain title to it.
The animals are rounded up by combined ground and helicopter crews.
The psychic trauma of such a roundup is presumed, without evidence or inquiry,
to be less than the trauma of being shot. The cost to the government of
each animal adopted, after subtracting the adoption fee collected was $400
in flscal year 1981, and $474 in fiscal year 1982 (BLM 1982). Thus is the
expense of unwanted cruelty commonized (Hardin 1985b) .
How many Americans have a suitable horse lot, and the money and the
inclination to adopt a wild horse? The number is unknown. How fast is the
number of potential adopters increasing? With continued urbanization the
population of potential adopters is undoubtedly shrinking. Meanwhile the
wild horse population grows at plus ten percent per year.
The working of the mind of the committed animal lover is one of the
wonders of nature. Light is thrown on this wonder by a statement made in
Florida in 1982, when a portion of the Everglades became seriously overpopulated
with deer. The state Game and Fresh Water Commission recommended that the
deer population of 5,500 be reduced by killing 2,250 animals (41%). Reacting
to this proposal a Florida attorney sought a court injunction to protect
the lives of innocent, helpless, harmless, and otherwise happy creatures
that have been placed on earth by God to be free from the torment of man."
He claimed that killing any of the animals would amount to a "deprivation
of the rights of the deer to live freely and peacefully on earth, according
to nature's order" (Florida 1983).
In other words, this attorney was extending into the animal realm the
idea of the "sanctity of life" that many ethicists accept in the human
realm. Ironically, this amounts to a denial of the exemptionism that is
usually supported by those who reject the conclusions of biology. Curiously,
the manner of the rejection is the exact opposite of that practiced by
biologists: animals lovers would endow animals with the gifts usually reserved
for human beings.
Animal lovers and professional biologists should be able to agree on
the ultimate goal of game management: to minimize the aggregate suffering
of animals. They differ in their time horizons and in the focus of their
immediate attention. Biologists insist that time has no stop and that we
should seek to maximize the wellbeing of the herd over an indefinite period
of time. To do that we must "read the landscape," looking for signs of
overexploitation of the environment by a population that has grown beyond
the carrying capacity.
By contrast, the typical animal lover ignores the landscape while focusing
on individual animals. To assert preemptive animal rights amounts to asserting
the sanctity of animal life, meaning each and every individual life. Were
an ecologist to use a similar rhetoric he would speak of the "sanctity
of carrying capacity." By this he would mean that we must consider the
needs not only of the animals in front of us today but also of unborn descendants
reaching into the indefinite future.
Time has no stop, the world is finite, biological reproduction is necessarily
exponential: for these combined reasons the sanctity strategy as pursued
by animal lovers in the long run saves fewer lives, and these at a more
miserable level of existence, than does the capacity strategy pursued by
ecologically knowledge able biologists.
Thus do we have the paradox that the interests of an animal species
are best served by focusing attention on the environment rather than the
individual animals. The environment is taken as a "given," and the animal
population is made to match the capacity of the environment.
THE HUMAN CONTEXT: CULTURE AND CARRYING CAPACITY
So far as it is within our power we surely would like to manage human
populations under the ideal used for animals, namely, to minimize suffering
and maximize happiness over many generations. This means that, for human
populations as for others, the prime commandment must be Thou shalt not
transgress the carrying capacity.
Most of the principles worked out for populations of nonhuman animals
apply with little change to human populations. Carrying capacity must take
account of seasonal variationsóhence Aesop's story "The Ant and the Grasshopper."
Long cycle secular variations may also be important (though man, the inveterate
optimist, seldom takes really adequate account of future threats). And
variations in expert opinion are even greater when we deal with the human
situation.
For nonhuman animals it seems reasonable to measure carrying capacity
in terms of resources available for survival. In evaluating the human situation,
however, we are not satisfied with so simple a metric. We hold that "Man
does not live by bread alone." We go beyond the spiritual meaning of the
Biblical quotation in distinguishing between mere existence and the good
life. This distinction, like so many population-related ideas, was well
understood by Malthus, who held that the density of population should be
such that people could enjoy meat and a glass of wine with their dinners.
Implicitly, Malthus's concept of carrying capacity included cultural factors.
The good life, then, must include a reasonable (though undefined) amount
of luxury food (fresh vegetables, quality meats, delicious drinks), clothing
beyond that needed for mere conservation of body heat, comfortable housing,
adequate transportation, space heating and cooling, electronic entertainment,
vacations, etc., etc.
There is no agreed upon metric to which we can reduce the various goods
so that we can compare the level of living of one people with another.
There is, however, a useful partial measure. and that is the units of energy
used per capita year in the various countries.
Periodically the United Nations publishes a measure of energy use, stated
in terms of kilograms of coal equivalent per capita per annum. Consider
the following figures for the year 1982: Ethiopia, 31; World, 1,823; United
States, 9,431 (UN 1984). On a relative basis, setting Ethiopia equal to
unity, these become: Ethiopia, 1; World, 59; United States, 304.
Admittedly, many real components of the quality of life are left out
of this energy measure, e.g., many aesthetic goods, interpersonal goods,
and perhaps even spiritual goods. Material energy sources are, to a large
extent, interconvertible as sources of material goods and facilitators
of immaterial goods. Wood can be burned to cook food, burned to heat a
house, or used to construct a house. Oil can cook food, heat a house, or
be used to create raw materials for an artistic painting. Crude as it is,
the measure of people's energy consumption at least yields a first approximation
to the material quality of their life.
The enjoyment of nonmaterial goods requires at least a minimum of material
well-being. On this crude measure, the average inhabitant of the world
is about 60 times as well off as an average Ethiopian, while Americans
are more than 300 times as well off. Anyone who goes to Ethiopia and tries
to live the life of an average Ethiopian will conclude that these flgures
cannot be far wrong.
Carrying capacity is inversely related to the quality of life. When
dealing with human beings there is no unique figure for carrying capacity.
So when a pronatalist asserts (Revelle 1974) that the world can easily
support 40 to 50 billion peopleósome ten times the present population --
he need not be contradicted. If everyone lived on the energy budget of
the Ethiopians, the earth might support 60 times the present population,
or about 300 billion people.
The figure just given is only a crude estimate. In less hospitable regions,
e.g., in Lappland, energy must be used to produce more clothing or space
heating. In the Imperial Valley of California, energy must be used for
the importation and pumping of water. But such facts are no more than the
details that would be needed to refine the estimate of the maximum possible
population supportable by the earthóif such an estimate is worth refining,
which is doubtful.
In the physical sciences the most basic terms stand for entities that
are "conserved under transformations," that is for entities that remain
quantitatively the same when qualitatively changed. Mass and energy are
such conservative concepts. Without conservative concepts intellectual
anarchy takes over and analysis becomes impossible.
In bioeconomics carrying capacity plays a conservative role. In the
nonhuman world its application presents few problems. Carrying capacity
does not vary without cause; it does not increase in response to need;
it cannot be transgressed with impunity; and its definition in particular
circumstances presents no serious problem to the well-informed. Such is
the situation so long as we deal only with nonhuman populations.
When we move to human populations, however, the situation changes. The
naive question, "What is the human carrying capacity of the earth?" evokes
a reply that is of no human use. No thoughtful person is willing to assume
that mere animal survival is acceptable when the animal is Homo sapiens.
We want to know what the environment will carry in the way of cultural
amenities, where the word culture is taken in the anthropological sense
to include all of the artifacts of human existence: institutions, buildings,
customs, inventions, knowledge. Energy consumption is a crude measure of
the involvement of culture. It may not be the best measure possible, but
it will do for a first approach.
When dealing with human problems, I propose that we abandon the term
carrying capacity in favor of cultural carrying capacity or, more briefly
cultural capacity. As defined, the cultural capacity of a territory will
always be less than its carrying capacity (in the simple animal sense).
Cultural capacity is inversely related to the (material) quality of life
presumed. Arguments about the proper cultural capacity revolve around our
expectations for the quality of life. Given fixed resources and well-defined
values, cultural capacity, like its parent carrying capacity, is a conservative
concept.
ECONOMISTS AND ECOLOGISTS IN CONFLICT
Suppose resources are not fixed? If by resources we mean natural resources
that are available for human use at a particular time, at a particular
stage in technological development, then resources have not been firmly
fixed during all of human history. The past two centuries have seen the
most spectacular increase in the resources actually available for human
use. Malthus, because he was not acutely aware of the increase in carrying
capacity going on in his time, was so unlucky as to put forth a theory
of population that was too static to suit the economists of subsequent
times, who are keenly aware of the effect of technology on the resources
effectively available to the human species.
A careful reading of Malthus's work shows that he described what we
would now call a cybernetic system in which negative (or corrective) feedbacks
keep the population fluctuating about a relatively fixed set point (Hardin
and Bajema 1978). The set point is, of course, the carrying capacity of
the environment. Unfortunately for Malthus's reputation, the spectacular
development of technology in the years after 1798 moved the set point steadily
upward.
Biologists find no difficulty in fitting this new fact into the Malthusian
cybernetic scheme, but many economists and other social scientists see
the continued increase in available resources as incompatible with Malthusian
theory. The difference in opinion is closely connected with a difference
in the perception of time (Hardin 1985b). Economics, the handmaiden of
business, is daily concerned with "discounting the future," a mathematical
operation that, under high rates of interest, has the effect of making
the future beyond a very few years essentially disappear from rational
calculation. Told that petroleum resources will, for all practical purposes,
be exhausted in 20 years, the biologist starts to worry, while the economist
merely yawns. For most economic planning, the ultimate horizon of time
is only five years away.
The economist can give two rather telling arguments for continuing to
refuse to take seriously any predictions of the state of the world more
than five years from now. First, for more than two centuries science has
come up with one miracle after another, steadily increasing the functional
carrying capacity of the world.
WHY SHOULD SCIENCE NOT CONTINUE TO DO SO?
Scientists see less of the miraculous in the development of technology.
I am afraid that many economists see "Science-and-Technology" as a magician
with a bottomless hat out of which an endless series of rabbits can be
pulled. Economists have difficulty taking energy shortages seriously. They
say: "First we had wood for fuel. As that became exhausted, we found we
could use coal. Before that became exhausted, we discovered oil. As we
began to worry about the supply of that, we discovered atomic energy. It
looks like atomic energy is inexhaustible; but if it isn't, why worry?
Scientists will discover something else; and just in time, as they always
have in the past." Such faith may be heartwarming, but it is also dangerous.
Economists have advanced another excuse for never worrying (Simon 1981),
which is rather subtle and more difficult to deal with. Quoting Aesop,
they maintain that "Necessity is the mother of invention." This is certainly
at least a half-truth. But some economists go on to imply that the greater
the necessity, the greater the inventiveness. This may be seriously doubted.
In our time, necessity is greatest in wretchedly poor countries like Bangladesh
and Ethiopia; but is inventiveness at its maximum in such poor countries?
Certainly not.
The stimulus of necessity is most effective when the standard of living
includes a considerable surplus of resources (luxury) available for investment
in the chancey activities of investigation, invention, and testing.
Put another way, when the scale of living falls so far below the cultural
carrying capacity as to preclude effective inventivenessówhen the cultural
capacity is seriously transgressedóthen living conditions spiral downward
as the good life degenerates into mere existence sans inventiveness. Translated
into human terms, the ecological first commandment becomes: Thou shalt
not transgress the cultural capacity.
ONE WORLD OR MANY?
To whom is the first commandment of ecology addressed: to the whole
world acting as a unit, or to subdivisions of the world? Is it wise to
hope and plan for One World, a world without borders? Or must our plans
assume the continuation of subdivisions something like the nations we now
know? This is perhaps the most fundamental political question of our time.
The insights of biology are needed to solve it.
The dream of One World has ancient roots. Buddha, born more than half
a millennium before Christ, took a universalist position. He seems to have
had little direct influence on the development of Western thought. Diogenes,
in the fourth century BC, rejected mere patriotism, calling himself kosmopolites,
a citizen of the world. Zeno of Citium, in the next century, committed
Stoicism to the same ideal. Christianity apparently derived this universal
ideal from the Stoics. Though parishes developed as a valuable administrative
unit of the church, the guiding ideal of Christianity has departed more
and more from parochialism (L. parochia, diocese or parish).
During the past century the production of literature extolling One World
has been a "growth industry." For this there are two reasons, one good
and one bad (or at any rate, insufficient). The good reason has its roots
in the consequences of the growth of population and technology. Population
growth shrinks the regions between competing sovereignties and brings us
every day closer to "living in each other's pockets." Technology, ever
more puissant in both war and peace, exacerbates the consequences of propinquity.
The mounting dangers of such commonized disasters as acid rain, the greenhouse
effect, and the nuclear winter make anybody's business everybody's business.
A purely localized solution to such problems is no solution at all. When
it comes to the commons of water and air, we truly live in One World, whether
or not we are clever enough to make the appropriate political adjustments.
The insufficient reason for the decline of parochialism in our time
arises from a philosophical error. Wealth comes in only three forms: matter,
energy, and information. The first two forms obey conservation laws: their
exchanges are of the zero-sum sort. What Peter gains, Paul loses. When
it comes to material wealth, selective forces operate against generosity
and in favor of self-interest.
By contrast, exchanges of information are not bound by conservation
principles: positive-sum outcomes are possible. The information that Peter
gives to Paul does not make Peter the poorer. Moreover, Paul may operate
on that information, later handing it back to Peter in improved form. That's
a plus-sum relationship. Within limits, selection favors cautious generosity
and disfavors extreme selfishness when it comes to the wealth of information.
Other things equal, when it comes to the distribution of information, a
world without borders should be a richer world than one divided into tight-lipped
parishes.
Nowhere has the rejection of parochialism been stronger than in the
world of science and scholarship generally. Those who deal primarily with
ideas may quite unconsciously generalize the plus-sum property of information
exchanges into the domains of matter and energy, where it does not apply.
It is not uncommon for dealers in information to naively suppose that Karl
Marx's "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs"
(Marx 1972) is a wise rule to follow in exchanges involving matter and
energy (as well as information).
I believe I have shown in "The Tragedy of the Commons" (Hardin 1968)
that the promiscuous sharing of matter and energy leads to universal ruin.
The argument may be restated in new and more biological terms. If discrete
entities (nations, for example) are in reality competing for scarce resources,
those entities that follow Marx's ideal will be at a competitive disadvantage
competing with more self-seeking entities. The selective value of Marx's
ideal is negative, so long as the number of administrative entities is
greater than one.
But what if there is only one administrative unit? What if we succeed
in creating the One World yearned for by Christians, Marxists, and countless
other groups? Never mind that many keen minds have regarded this possibility
as being highly improbable. What if...?
Bertrand Russell has given the answer. To survive as a cohesive unit,
an entity must be held together by some sort of cohesive force. Says Russell:
"Always when we pass beyond the limits of the family it is the external
enemy which supplies the cohesive force....A world state, if it were firmly
established, would have no enemies to fear, and would therefore be in danger
of breaking down through lack of cohesive force" (Russell 1949). The writers
of science fiction have long been aware of this, repeatedly creating a
scenario that brings the nations of the world into a genuine union through
the threat of enemies from outer space. Unfortunately, all experience with
space, to date, has given us no hope of discovering such enemies. So the
problem One World or Many? remains with us.
I have argued elsewhere (Hardin 1982) that no single way will suffice
to administer the affairs of what some people call "Spaceship Earth." There
must be some sort of fragmentation of administrative tasks, though a universal
approach is needed for the protection of the commons of air and water.
But most material wealth is, after all, fragmented around the world; parochial
distribution calls for parochial controls. This logical necessity meshes
well with the territorial instincts that have been selected for during
millions of years of biological evolution. How the necessary "mixed economy"
of administration is to be created and sustained is an enormous problem.
In the meantime, whether or not we discover how to administer the commons
of air and water, we must clarify our thoughts about the impact of competitive
living on cultural carrying capacities. As before, let us allow per capita
energy use to deputize for the total standard of living. This is an oversimplification
of the real world, but the consequences deduced are general and would hold
up under a more thorough analysis.
In making comparisons of one group of people with another it is difficult
to attain objectivity, because we are one of the world's groups and we
have varying relations with all the others. It will help, I think, if we
use the intellectual device of the "man from Mars," the observer who can
be perfectly objective about earthly affairs because he has no terrestrial
ties.
The man from Mars makes a tour of the earth and notes the widely varying
standards of living and the widely varying densities of population. He
also notes that resources vary widely in their distribution. Having evolved
by natural selection on Marsóis there any other way to evolve?óour martian
(like earthlings) has strong territorial feelings. He points out that a
parochial distribution of resources should be matched by parochial consumption.
This general principle does not preclude international trade when a particular
resource is in very short supply in a particular nation; by trading parts
of their relative surpluses, trading nations can mutually gain.
The per capita consumption of energy in Bangladesh is one thirty-eighth
as great as the world average. Spokesmen for the country complain about
this low energy income. (The material quality of life, however measured,
seems correspondingly low.) How should others react to this discrepancy?
The standard earthly response is to say, "Bangladesh suffers from shortages."
Thus do earthlings demonstrate their fellow-feeling for the Bangladeshi,
even though this may be the only way they do so. But what would the man
from Mars say? Being under no felt necessity to demonstrate fellow-feeling,
he might well respond thus: "Shortage, you say? Shortage of resources?
If parochial resources are being fully used, how can there be a shortage?
Parochial demand should match parochial supply. Why not say there is a
longage in demand? Though it may not be possible to increase supply, it
is always possible to decrease demand. You do this either by reducing people's
expectations, or by reducing the number of people who have expectationsówhich
can always be done by reducing the birth rate. (There is no necessity to
increase the death rate.)"
Continuing, the man from Mars says: "If each Bangladeshi enjoys only
one thirty-eighth as much energy as the average earthling, maybe there
are 38 times too many people living in Bangladesh? Should we not speak
of a 'longage' of people, rather than a shortage of resources? In principle,
a longage is always soluble; a shortage may not be."
If Bangladesh reduced its present population of 104 million people by
a factor of 38 it would have only 2.7 million people. It is of interest
to note that the state of Iowa has exactly the same area as Bangladesh,
but with only 2.9 million people. There are many significant differences
between the two areas, so not too much should be made of the contrast in
population. But the equivalence does show that the suggested population
for Bangladesh is not terribly unreasonable.
Adopting the martian principle that parochial demands should match parochial
supplies would eliminate one important excuse for aggressive international
actions. Implicitly thinking in One World terms easily leads to the concept
of poor or "have-not" nations. An excessive passion for justice can then
easily lead to the assertion that being poor justifies corrective military
action. In our thermonuclear world, is there any justice that would justify
embarking on an uncontrollable war?
By contrast, the carrying capacity approach results in replacing the
concept of a "have-not" nation with that of an "overpopulation" nation.
It's a rare piece of property that cannot support a suitably small population
in comfort. This does not mean that every territory will have a helping
of all the amenities of life: people who live in Spitzbergen should not
assert their right to tropical beaches, nor people in Bali their right
to skiing. The exceptional property that cannot meet a minimum standard
for human existence should have a zero population. It makes no sense to
say that every territory has a right to be occupied by a human population.
Some wretched territories now inhabited should be abandoned.
Overpopulation can be corrected by means short of homicide and war.
The means is attrition, which means seeing to it that the birth rate falls
below the death rate (Hardin 1985b). This may be painful, but it is not
war. For members of the Western world, part of the pain of adjustment of
population to reality arises from the necessity of reexamining and substantially
modifying our concept of human rights. In this reexamination, the deep
concept of cultural carrying capacity must play a central role.
Garrett Hardin, professor emeritus of human ecology at the University
of California, Santa Barbara, received the 1986 AIBS Distinguished Service
Award for his contributions in the field of ecology and his long-time efforts
to apply scientific methods to the ethical and political dilemmas posed
by population growth and resource depletion. This is the text of his acceptance
speech, given 10 August 1986 at the AIBS Annual Meeting at the University
of Massachusetts, Amherst.
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Carrying Capacity Network . FOCUS/Volume 2, No. 3, 1992
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