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The Tragedy of the Commons

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Title: The Tragedy of the Commons


1
The Tragedy of the Commons
2
Garrett Hardin
  • American Ecologist and Microbiologist
  • (1915-2003)
  • Controversial figure
  • Concerned with overpopulation
  • Pro-abortion
  • Pro-population control by government
  • Pro-assisted suicide
  • Anti-immigration
  • Anti-international aid
  • The Tragedy of the Commons
  • Published in Science magazine 1968
  • Had four children
  • Committed suicide together with his wife when he
    was 88 (she was 81)

3
Problems with no technical solution
Some problems cannot be solved with science, e.g.
the arms race. Overpopulation and competition
for resources is this kind of problem. Since no
technical solution, the solution must be
political.
  • Thomas Malthus (1766-1834, English political
    economist)
  • Population grows exponentially, food supply can
    only increase arithmetically, so eventually we
    will starve (or decrease population via wars,
    disease or anarchy)

4
The Commons
  • Commons common land available to all for grazing
    animals, gathering wood, etc.
  • Tragedy of the commons every farmer will tend to
    maximize their own profits by increasing their
    herd or increasing their gathering of resources
    without regard to the long-term depletion of the
    land. This is rational because the benefit to the
    individual farmer (of, for example, grazing one
    more animal on the commons) is larger than that
    farmers share of the overall depletion of the
    shared resource (i.e. the commons).
  • Historical commons not really a free-for-all.
    Not public land. Only small number of farmers had
    inherited limited bundles of rights, numbers of
    animals were limited.

5
The New Commons
  • The tragedy of the commons is a metaphor for
    anything held in common, used by all freely and
    not regulated.
  • Everyone will maximize his own benefit to the
    detriment of the whole.
  • Modern commons include
  • The sea -- overfishing
  • The air, the land, rivers -- pollution
  • The public noise level -- sound pollution
  • National parks overuse
  • The earth itself (energy, food supply, living
    standards) -- overpopulation

6
Overpopulation
  • Hardins main concern.
  • Freedom to breed is intolerable
  • Overpopulation harms the world as a whole. The
    more
  • people there are, the fewer resources there are
    available to each person.
  • As long as we have a welfare state, people will
    continue to have more children than is good for
    society. Rational agents maximize their own good
    (more children), when the cost to them is
    relatively low because the cost is shared in
    common with society as a whole.
  • Assumption each child is a net good to its
    parents but a net bad to society.
  • Has any cultural group solved this practical
    problem at the present time, even on an intuitive
    level? One simple fact proves that none has
    there is no prosperous population in the world
    today that has, and has had for some time, a
    growth rate of zero.

7
New Developments in World Population
  • Hardins work written in 1968. Since then
  • Chinas one-child policy
  • Nearly one hundred countries now have a
    fertility rate below replacement level, including
    the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Germany,
    Vietnam, Brazil,, Cuba, Kazakhstan, Brunei,
    Russia, Japan, China, Thailand, Macao and Hong
    Kong.
  • Hong Kong is the lowest at .98 children per
    woman.
  • the most rapidly growing populations on earth
    today are (in general) the most miserable.
  • Still true.
  • Countries with the highest fertility rates
    Mali, Niger, Uganda, Somalia, Afganistan, Yemen,
    Burundi, Burkina Faso, the Congo, Angola, Sierra
    Leone (all over 6 children per woman)
  • The demographic economic paradox.

8
Solution
  • Hardin appeals to individual conscience are bad
    because
  • 1) It discriminates against people of good
    conscience, and tends to eliminate them from the
    population.
  • 2) It wont work in the long run. Natures
    revenge. People without conscience with outbreed
    the others, and population will increase again
    eventually.
  • 3) It is not psychologically healthy to force
    people to act against their own interests on the
    basis of conscience.
  • So the only choice is mutual coercion mutually
    agreed upon
  • Freedom must be limited.

9
Mutual Coercion Mutually Agreed Upon
  • Mutual coercion to solve population problem
    (government regulation on number of offspring
    allowed) and other problems of the commons
  • Enclose the commons as private property,
  • Or limit usage of the commons (e.g. limits on
    peoples right to pollute, to fish on the high
    seas, to increase public noise levels, etc.)
  • Quotes Hegel (Engels) Freedom is the
    recognition of necessity
  • Rights and freedoms must be restricted for the
    good of everyone.
  • The right to breed in excess is like the right
    to steal from banks it must be controlled.

10
Questions for discussion
  • Is what Hardin advocates fascism?
  • Is it justified? Is it necessary?
  • Is Chinas one-child policy justified?
  • Why have birth rates fallen in the developed
    world (and much of the developing world?)
  • Why is it so low in Hong Kong?
  • Is it conscience?
  • Is relying on conscience/voluntary restriction of
    anti-social behavior self-defeating in the long
    run?
  • Is the Hong Kong government right to try to
    persuade people to have at least three children?

11
Reading
  • Required
  • Naess, Arne, (1983) The Deep Ecological
    Movement Some Philosophical Aspects, in
    Environmental Philosophy, p. 193-211, on handout
  • Des Jardins, Environmental Ethics, Chapter 10,
    Deep Ecology p. 210-231, on handout
  • Suggested
  • Des Jardins, Environmental Ethics, Chapter 7,
    Biocentric Ethics and the Inherent Value of
    LIfe p. 128-151, on reserve in Philosophy Dept.
  • Berry, Thomas, The Viable Human, , in
    Environmental Philosophy, p. 171-181, on reserve
    in Philosophy Dept.
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