Growth
Growth
Vaclav Smil
Bill Gates
The newest of 39 brilliant books by one of my favorite thinkers. - Bill Gates
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Growth

Growth: From Microorganisms to Megacities

Vaclav Smil
By
Vaclav Smil
3.9
1034
ratings on Goodreads

In "Growth," Vaclav Smil embarks on an ambitious exploration of the universal concept of growth, a force so intrinsic to the fabric of life and human society that it shapes everything from the minutest organisms to the grandest civilizations. With a meticulous eye, Smil navigates the reader through a vast landscape of subjects, uncovering the patterns and processes of growth in nature and society. From the proliferation of cells to the expansion of mega cities, from the development of human beings to the rise and fall of empires, Smil masterfully illustrates how growth, in all its forms, dictates the progression of life on Earth and the trajectory of human endeavor. Crafted with the precision of a scientist and the narrative flair of a seasoned storyteller, "Growth" delves deep into how this fundamental force operates across different scales and contexts. Smil guides us from the micro to the macro, examining how energy conversions and technological advancements have fueled civilizations, while also confronting the limits imposed by the biosphere. With a perspective that is both analytical and reflective, this book stands as a profound meditation on the complexities of growth, challenging the reader to consider the delicate balance between expansion and sustainability. "Growth" is not merely a book; it is a comprehensive journey through the essence of existence, compelling us to rethink our relationship with the natural world and our place within its vast, intricate system.

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Released
2019
24 Sep
Length
664
Pages

1

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The newest of 39 brilliant books by one of my favorite thinkers. - Bill Gates
This might be perhaps the simplest single-paragraphy summation of civilizational advances, a concise summary of growth that matters most. Our ability to provide a reliable, adequate food supply thanks to yields an order of magnitude higher than in early agricultures has been made possible by large energy subsidies and it has been accompanied by excessive waste. A near-tripling of average life expectancies has been achieved primarily by drastic reductions of infant mortality and by effective control of bacterial infections. Our fastest mass-travel speeds are now 50-150 times higher than walking. Per capita economic product in affluent countries is roughly 100 times larger than in antiquity, and useful energy deployed per capita is up to 200-250 times higher. Gains in destructive power have seen multiples of many (5-11) orders of magnitude. And, for an average human, there has been essentially an infinitely large multiple in access to stored information, while the store of information civilization-wide will soon be a trillion times larger than it was two millenia ago.And this is the most worrisome obverse of these advances: they have been accompanied by a multitude of assaults on the biosphere. Foremost among them has been the scale of the human claim on plants, including a significant reduction of the peak posts-glacial area of natural forests (on the order of 20%), mostly due to deforestation in temperate and tropical regions; a concurrent expansion of cropland to cover about 11% of continental surfaces; and an annual harvest of close to 20% of the biosphere's primary productivity (Smil 2013a). Other major global concerns are the intensification of natural soil erosion rates, the reduction of untouched wilderness areas to shrinking isolated fragments, and a rapid loss of biodiversity in general and within the most species-rich biomes in particular. And then there is the leading global concern: since 1850 we have emitted close to 300 Gt of fossil carbon to the atmosphere (Boden and Andres 2017). This has increased tropospheric CO2 concentrations from 280 ppm to 405 ppm by the end of 2017 and set the biosphere on a course of anthropogenic global warming (NOAA 2017).These realities clearly demonstrate that our preferences have not been to channel our growing capabilities either into protecting the biosphere or into assuring decent prospects for all newborns and reducing life's inequalities to tolerable differences. Judging by the extraordinary results that are significantly out of line with the long-term enhancements of our productive and protective abilities, we have preferred to concentrate disproportionately on multiplying the destructive capacities of our weapons and, even more so, on enlarging our abilities for the mass-scale acquisition and storage of information and for instant telecommunication, and have done so to an extent that has become not merely questionable but clearly counterproductive in many ways.
— Vaclav Smil, Growth

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