A Bioeconomic Program

Russian Studies in Philosophy 13 (2):68-73 (1974)
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Abstract

The mid-twentieth century marks a frontier in the development of social production: the scale of human transformative activity has come to approximate that of natural processes. As a result, a certain bilateral relationship has begun to manifest itself more and more clearly: The state of the environment depends on the scale of production and level of technology, while the growth rate of social production has come to depend on the state of the environment.

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