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527 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2013
among the many tricks we will try to keep fitting ourselves onto this planet, there is one that we already know. the technology is cheaper than all the others by many orders of magnitude. it is reducing the numbers of bodies to feed by managing our reproduction, before nature steps in to do that for us.books warning of the looming climate catastrophe have proliferated for years, but countdown, in focusing on the population-side factor of the equation, argues for wider adoption of solutions already in place and calls for injecting sense, wisdom, and prudence into the discussion. weisman’s plea is surely more effective than those that proffer a litany of worst-case scenarios designed to scare us into action. by exploring and integrating the lessons from cultures the world over, weisman has been able to provide a blueprint that will ultimately benefit the planet as a whole. countdown is a timely, essential, and hopeful work – one that suggests compassion in place of consumption and promises a return to an equilibrium that will prove a veritable windfall for humans, non-humans, and ecosystems alike.
yet although we strive for the heavens, as pascal noted, we are still mammals who, like all other earthly creatures, require food and water - resources that we are now outstripping. out seafood is down to dregs scraped from the ocean floor; our soils on chemical life support; our rivers fouled and drained. we squeeze and shatter rocks, mine frigid seas, and split atoms in risky places because easily harvested fuels are nearly gone. like kaibab deer, every species in the history of biology that outgrows its resource base suffers a population crash - a crash sometimes fatal to the entire species. in a world now stretched to the brink, today we all live in a parkland, not a boundless wilderness. to survive and continue the legacy of our species, we must adjust accordingly. inevitably - and, we must hope, humanely and nonviolently - that means gradually bringing our numbers down. the alternative is letting nature - the new nature we've inadvertently created in our own image - do that for us.