Journal article | Zeitschriftenartikel
Seeking consilience for sustainability science: physical sciences, life sciences, and the new economics
The human system, driven largely by economic decisions, has profoundly affected planetary ecosystems as well as the energy supplies and natural resources essential to economic production. The challenge of sustainability is to understand and manage the complex interactions between human systems and the rest of nature. This conceptual article makes the case that meeting this challenge requires consilience between the natural sciences, social sciences and humanities, which is to say that their basic assumptions must be mutually reinforcing and consistent. This article reviews the extent to which economics is pursuing consilience with the sciences of human behavior, physics and ecology, and the impact full consilience would have on the field. The science of human behavior would force economists to redefine what is desirable, while physics and ecology redefine what is possible. The challenges posed by ecological degradation can be modeled as prisoner's dilemmas, best solved through cooperation, not competition. Fortunately, science reveals that humans may be among the most cooperative of all species. While much of the mainstream economic theory that still dominates academic and the policy discourse continues to ignore important findings from other sciences, several sub-fields of economics have made impressive strides towards consilience in recent decades, and these are likely to change mainstream theory eventually. The question is whether these changes can proceed rapidly enough to solve the most serious problems we currently face.
- ISSN
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2297-6477
- Extent
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Seite(n): 1-17
- Language
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Englisch
- Notes
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Status: Veröffentlichungsversion; begutachtet (peer reviewed)
- Bibliographic citation
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Challenges in Sustainability, 2(1)
- Subject
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Wirtschaft
Naturwissenschaften
Ökologie
Psychologie
Soziologie, Anthropologie
Wissenschaftssoziologie, Wissenschaftsforschung, Technikforschung, Techniksoziologie
Naturwissenschaften, Technik(wissenschaften), angewandte Wissenschaften
Ökologie und Umwelt
Sozialpsychologie
Allgemeines, spezielle Theorien und Schulen, Methoden, Entwicklung und Geschichte der Wirtschaftswissenschaften
Naturwissenschaft
Sozialwissenschaft
Geisteswissenschaft
Physik
Ökologie
Wirtschaft
Verhalten
Kooperation
Interdisziplinarität
Mensch
Auswirkung
Einfluss
- Event
-
Geistige Schöpfung
- (who)
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Farley, Joshua
- Event
-
Veröffentlichung
- (where)
-
Schweiz
- (when)
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2014
- DOI
- Last update
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21.06.2024, 4:26 PM CEST
Data provider
GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften. Bibliothek Köln. If you have any questions about the object, please contact the data provider.
Object type
- Zeitschriftenartikel
Associated
- Farley, Joshua
Time of origin
- 2014