Available Formats
Insatiable Is Not Sustainable
By (Author) Douglas M. Brown
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Economics
330
Hardback
232
In today's culture of insatiable freedom, many believe that to be human is to be an insatiable self-actualizer. Yet insatiable is not sustainable. In order to solve today's crisis of environmental sustainability--and human sustainability--we must let go of our obsession to constantly be more. The desire to have all that we can have comes. Brown argues, from a cultural norm that has evolved to become an economic, social, and moral imperative. After tracing human history from a culture of security through the emergence of capitalism and the evolution of the insatiable self, Brown suggests ways to create a culture of sustainability.
"If humans are going to have a future on this planet, a blaze of change has to sweep the earth in the next few decades--a change in the way people think about the world and our place in it. One of the sparks that is going to kindle this blaze is Doug Brown's Insatiable Is Not Substainable, a book that reaches deep into the mad recesses of our culture (while retaining a sense of humor and remaining delightfully readable)."-Daniel Quinn author of Ishmael
DOUG BROWN is Professor of Economics in the College of Business at Northern Arizona University. His areas of research focus on institutional economics, comparative economic systems, the globalization of capitalism, and human and environmental sustainability. His books include The Economic Status of Women Under Capitalism (1994) and Thorstein Veblen in the Twenty-first Century (1998). He is active in the Association for Institutional Economics and the Association for Evolutionary Economics.