Why do better with less?

The Case for Compression – Society faces complex challenges that can be reduced in size and scope by doing better with less.



Why do we need to improve quality of life while drastically reducing resources? The case for Compression rests on no single, clinching thread of evidence. That for practical purposes the world is finite should be self-evident, yet optimistic bias in the simplest of financial formulas for compound interest presumes growth; perhaps unending growth. Presuming that a higher price will bring a greater quantity to market assumes that more can be had – somewhere, somehow. But if no more can be had at any price, a market in any conventional sense no longer is possible. That is, recognition that we live in a physically finite world turns many of our rules of economics, and for living, upside down.

We’re not in that kind of world yet, and may not be for years, but humans keep globally consuming more resources at a faster rate. Humans do not change quickly, and unless we begin to act, the consequences of this will be on us before we learn to cope. Why?


The scattering of issue headlines on a fractal image is intended to crudely illustrate that all these issues interrelate. Exactly how things will play out is not precisely predictable.  These issues have been classified in four headings in the four colored balls (finite resources, precarious environment, global pushback, excessive consumption).


RELATED ARTICLESExplain
The Compression Institute
Why do better with less?
Excessive Consumption
Finite Resources
Global Pushback
Precarious Environment
Compression Groups
How to change?
What must change?
Mission
Graph of this discussion
Enter the title of your article


Enter a short (max 500 characters) summation of your article
Enter the main body of your article
Lock
+Comments (0)
+Citations (0)
+About
Enter comment

Select article text to quote
welcome text

First name   Last name 

Email

Skip