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**Richard Smith, //Green Capitalism: The God That Failed//** | **Richard Smith, //Green Capitalism: The God That Failed//** | ||
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+ | {{:gc-smith.jpg?150|Green Capitalism}} | ||
Paperback, 172 pages\\ | Paperback, 172 pages\\ | ||
[[https://www.worldeconomicsassociation.org/library/green-capitalism-the-god-that-failed/|World Economic Association Books]]\\ | [[https://www.worldeconomicsassociation.org/library/green-capitalism-the-god-that-failed/|World Economic Association Books]]\\ | ||
ISBN: 1848902050 | ISBN: 1848902050 | ||
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+ | //Author's synopsis//: | ||
This book deals with the prime threat to human life on earth: the tendency of global capitalist economic development to develop us to death, to drive us off the cliff to ecological collapse. It begins with a review of the origins of this economic dynamic in the transition to capitalism in England and Europe and with an analysis of the ecological implications of capitalist economics as revealed in the work of its founding theorist Adam Smith. I argue that, once installed, the requirements of reproduction under capitalism – the pressure of competition, the imperative need to innovate and develop the forces of production to beat the competition, the need to constantly grow production and expand the market and so on, induced an expansive logic that has driven economic development, and now overdevelopment, down to our day. | This book deals with the prime threat to human life on earth: the tendency of global capitalist economic development to develop us to death, to drive us off the cliff to ecological collapse. It begins with a review of the origins of this economic dynamic in the transition to capitalism in England and Europe and with an analysis of the ecological implications of capitalist economics as revealed in the work of its founding theorist Adam Smith. I argue that, once installed, the requirements of reproduction under capitalism – the pressure of competition, the imperative need to innovate and develop the forces of production to beat the competition, the need to constantly grow production and expand the market and so on, induced an expansive logic that has driven economic development, and now overdevelopment, down to our day. |