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334 pages, Pocket Book
First published October 25, 2013
The contemporary moment is not one of new awareness, nor one of a moral leap leading us towards a better humanity and a nice planet governed by sustainable geo-management, nor one of reconciliation with Gaia. We have not suddenly passed from unawareness to awareness, we have not recently emerged from a modernist frenzy to enter an age of precaution. One of the determining aspects in the history of the Anthropocene is that of disinhibitions that normalise the intolerable...
Marginalist economists turned away from the study of factors of production (labour, capital, and land) and focused on the subjective states of consumers and producers seeking to maximise their individual utility. The economy no longer shared an object with the natural sciences (the production of material wealth), but only mathematical tools: the marginalists transposed equations taken from physics so as to create the illusion of a second world as coherent as nature, analogous but external.
According to its own progenitors, GDP was narrowly correlated with military expenditure, it could not be used during peacetime conditions. Nor could it be used by less developed countries, as the non-market sphere played too important a role there, falsifying international comparison. Secondly, GDP had to be reduced by the ‘costs of civilisation’, which included among other things pollution, traffic jams, police, judges, freeways, advertising ‘that stimulated artificial needs’, [...]. Thirdly, and above all, mining activity had to be counted negatively, since the exhaustion of resources impoverished the nation.