Quote from: tekla on October 05, 2008, 09:11:22 PM
Look, its impossible.
What's impossible?
Quote from: tekla on October 05, 2008, 09:11:22 PM
Production, markets, industry, and finance are all human activities. They will be concentrated in places with more humans.
OK, that's logical.
Quote from: tekla on October 05, 2008, 09:11:22 PM
Humans... tend to cluster in large population areas
Tautology. That
defines a high population area.
Quote from: tekla on October 05, 2008, 09:11:22 PM
Since that's where the people are, that's where those activities will be taking place.
OK, also a tautology, but for the purpose of illustration. I'm not sure why you mention this, though.
Quote from: tekla on October 05, 2008, 09:11:22 PM
Just like farming and other agricultural stuff will find itself in all the places were people are not.
That's a pretty funny statement on the face of it, but I think I see what you mean.
Quote from: tekla on October 05, 2008, 09:11:22 PM
Such activity can not be seen to be decentralized in any sense when they are all taking place in pretty much the same time and place.
Whoa, whoa! You just finished saying that agriculture takes place in a different location than industry. For that matter, industry and manufacturing isn't some homogeneous mass concentrated in one location - many products have diffuse, globe-spanning chains of production. Think about how coffee gets into the pot.
Did you read the link I posted?
Posted on: October 05, 2008, 10:42:55 pm
Quote from: Nichole on October 05, 2008, 08:56:36 PM
And the basic flaw with much of this seems to me to be that there is the presumption that when oil, coal, whatever is gone, why! like magic a new "unlimited" supply of something will be found to take care of the crisis. All through the agency of human creativity.
You're thinking in terms of the
status quo continuing under another name. I'm talking about shakeups, paradigm shifts. There's no magic replacement for resources that have been depleted, but there doesn't have to be. For example, we don't build with stone nearly as much as we used to. Instead, more efficient techniques and materials have become available, giving us entirely new forms of architecture. People found, and will continue to find, new ways to build, to live, to cope. Change is the only constant.
Oil and coal are used because - aside from atomic, which has image problems - they are the most efficient methods of producing energy today. Saying that we "should" switch to renewable resources, like solar or wind - that's saying we should ignore a windfall gain in the field of energy. Fossil fuels are just densely packed solar energy, ready and waiting for us. Sure, pollution is bad, but the incentives for clean energy production from oil and coal have been wrecked by subsidies and the corporate shield.
Quote from: Nichole on October 05, 2008, 08:56:36 PM
A hammer-maker may be wonderfully creative, but he's most likely to use his creativity to make a revolutionary hammer: not make a fusion reactor that works efficiently and at low cost.
And when we have no more need of hammers, or their price grows too great, our funds flow to someone better able to satisfy our desires.
Quote from: Nichole on May 22, 1970, 08:56:21 AM
Capitalists create desire
Untrue - human nature creates desire. We all want something. No sooner do we satisfy a desire, than a new one moves up to take its place. It's like a stack, a hierarchy of wants.
If we didn't want anything, we'd have no impetus to act. We'd all just lay on the ground until we died. I want for that not to happen.

Quote from: Nichole on May 22, 1970, 08:56:21 AM
Not all desire, just the ones that can be sold exorbitantly.
Exorbitantly? If you want to become rich, you don't sell custom yachts to the upper class - you sell a $1 toothbrush to everyone in China. Further, I wasn't aware that it was a bad thing to give people choices and options they didn't have before. I'd never presume to control another's life in such a fashion as to deny them their right to dispense with their wealth as they see fit, provided they respect my rights in return.
Also, don't forget that prices are a signaling mechanism in a market economy. They reflect relative scarcity of goods, and coordinate investment. If someone has a very high profit margin, than that's a signal for investment and expansion, thus driving the price down. If the retail price is high, but the profit margin is slim - that's a signal to find substitutes or improve production processes. And so on, and so forth.