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BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Dukasaur wrote:I can't comment on your area, but I do know that many salamanders are endangered, so I wonder if your impression of their abundance is skewed by the fact that you just happen to live in the one area where they are still plentiful?
Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
Metsfanmax wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
The standard economic analysis ought not to apply to conservation issues. If we apply that line of thinking, we will end up with no areas untouched by human industrialization (really that has already happened due to global warming though). We ought to preserve these reservoirs of nature rather than find the most economical way to exploit them, or else our ancestors will not be able to appreciate what it is this planet has given them. That is far more valuable than any short term profit that can be made from the land, even if it's hard to quantify.
Funkyterrance wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
The standard economic analysis ought not to apply to conservation issues. If we apply that line of thinking, we will end up with no areas untouched by human industrialization (really that has already happened due to global warming though). We ought to preserve these reservoirs of nature rather than find the most economical way to exploit them, or else our ancestors will not be able to appreciate what it is this planet has given them. That is far more valuable than any short term profit that can be made from the land, even if it's hard to quantify.
This is a great point as you can't put a price on purity.
However, I was meaning the decision to put the signs up on the roadway since I don't believe that those signs saved a significant amount of salamanders if any at all.
Metsfanmax wrote:My argument ties into that. Even if you don't value the individual lives of the salamanders that are therefore saved, there is some value in leaving undisturbed the ecosystem that these salamanders are part of. It sustains the purity you mention. When humans encroach on an ecosystem with industrialization, even if they don't destroy that ecosystem, they permanently disrupt the natural cycles occurring there. If we destroyed the habitat of those salamanders, that forest will never be the same as it would have been.
So, one way to think about this is that it is not for us to judge how many salamanders there ought to be. It might be more pleasing to us to inflict some sort of balance onto the ecosystem that we think is not unreasonable; but we ought not to be making this choice.
muy_thaiguy wrote:Out here over the summer, during the drought. Thousands upon thousands of acres of dead trees have been left standing (killed off by beetles not native to the area that do only harm) for years because enviromentalists didn't want to chop them down. These trees made the forest fires out here in Wyoming and Colorado (Utah as well) far more destructive than what they should have been. In many areas, it was like 2-3 dead trees for every living tree.
Funkyterrance wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:My argument ties into that. Even if you don't value the individual lives of the salamanders that are therefore saved, there is some value in leaving undisturbed the ecosystem that these salamanders are part of. It sustains the purity you mention. When humans encroach on an ecosystem with industrialization, even if they don't destroy that ecosystem, they permanently disrupt the natural cycles occurring there. If we destroyed the habitat of those salamanders, that forest will never be the same as it would have been.
So, one way to think about this is that it is not for us to judge how many salamanders there ought to be. It might be more pleasing to us to inflict some sort of balance onto the ecosystem that we think is not unreasonable; but we ought not to be making this choice.
I really do respect this view on the subject, don't get me wrong. It's just that when you look at it in that light you still have to pick a point where you say "enough". Technically speaking, one of those salamanders could crawl out of a puddle beyond the signs and tape and be stepped on by a child walking by. Should we then close off the entire park? Where/when does a sense of proportion kick in?
BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Funkyterrance wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
The standard economic analysis ought not to apply to conservation issues. If we apply that line of thinking, we will end up with no areas untouched by human industrialization (really that has already happened due to global warming though). We ought to preserve these reservoirs of nature rather than find the most economical way to exploit them, or else our ancestors will not be able to appreciate what it is this planet has given them. That is far more valuable than any short term profit that can be made from the land, even if it's hard to quantify.
This is a great point as you can't put a price on purity.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:My argument ties into that. Even if you don't value the individual lives of the salamanders that are therefore saved, there is some value in leaving undisturbed the ecosystem that these salamanders are part of. It sustains the purity you mention. When humans encroach on an ecosystem with industrialization, even if they don't destroy that ecosystem, they permanently disrupt the natural cycles occurring there. If we destroyed the habitat of those salamanders, that forest will never be the same as it would have been.
So, one way to think about this is that it is not for us to judge how many salamanders there ought to be. It might be more pleasing to us to inflict some sort of balance onto the ecosystem that we think is not unreasonable; but we ought not to be making this choice.
I really do respect this view on the subject, don't get me wrong. It's just that when you look at it in that light you still have to pick a point where you say "enough". Technically speaking, one of those salamanders could crawl out of a puddle beyond the signs and tape and be stepped on by a child walking by. Should we then close off the entire park? Where/when does a sense of proportion kick in?
Let me ask you this...
Are you truly knowlegable enough to know that removing this salamander won't impact human beings in a negative way.
Or, more broadly, that removing the protections for the habitat that provide fr this salamander won't harm humanity?
Metsfanmax wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
The standard economic analysis ought not to apply to conservation issues. If we apply that line of thinking, we will end up with no areas untouched by human industrialization (really that has already happened due to global warming though). We ought to preserve these reservoirs of nature rather than find the most economical way to exploit them, or else our ancestors will not be able to appreciate what it is this planet has given them. That is far more valuable than any short term profit that can be made from the land, even if it's hard to quantify.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
The standard economic analysis ought not to apply to conservation issues. If we apply that line of thinking, we will end up with no areas untouched by human industrialization (really that has already happened due to global warming though). We ought to preserve these reservoirs of nature rather than find the most economical way to exploit them, or else our ancestors will not be able to appreciate what it is this planet has given them. That is far more valuable than any short term profit that can be made from the land, even if it's hard to quantify.
Why are cows not extinct?
How do you know that the enabling of a price system only leads to "short-term profit" planning?
Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
The standard economic analysis ought not to apply to conservation issues. If we apply that line of thinking, we will end up with no areas untouched by human industrialization (really that has already happened due to global warming though). We ought to preserve these reservoirs of nature rather than find the most economical way to exploit them, or else our ancestors will not be able to appreciate what it is this planet has given them. That is far more valuable than any short term profit that can be made from the land, even if it's hard to quantify.
Why are cows not extinct?
How do you know that the enabling of a price system only leads to "short-term profit" planning?
Because economists always heavily discount the future. Unless the standard economic analysis is changed so that future value is considered to a much higher level, we'll never be able to escape the trap of thinking that, for example, it is worth it to level this forest to build a power plant.
PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Fine, but understand that the real price of the evironment is endless...
And ANY price for human profit is necessarily temporary. Except.. you neatly avoid that very real issue and pretend that Earth consequences can be limited to the visions of corporate balance sheets.
tzor wrote:I rather bring it back to where it began. It started out with someone taking the time, and resources to border mark every two bit puddle that borders a park trail. Now of course there is the economic impact of such an action; clearly someone made some money in selling all these stakes and signs. The question was whether it was worth it to do such a thing given that there are many other locations where these pools are (this isn't a pipping plover example where the only locations are generally on populated beaches).
The implication that these are exactly the same as the piping plover. I don't think this is the case. I think this is more of an awareness issue. Park people tend to do things like that; it's a part of their job description to make people aware. It is also something you can give an intern who gets so excited about doing something that it actually gives them pleasure doing it. (It's the whitewashed fence syndrome.)
BigBallinStalin wrote:1. economists? What about entrepreneurs (they're usually the ones making these decisions)?
2. How do you know that economists and/or entrepreneurs "always heavily discount the future"?
3. How does the "standard economic analysis" fail to 'impose higher interest rates on the present discounted value of longer term investments'? (which economic analysis? What theory? Are you making stuff up?)
]4. For example, forests v. power plant. Lemme ask you something. Are such decisions made on the margin, or is it always "1 forest minus 1 power plant, or 1 power plant minus 1 forest"?
5. Finally, why are cows not extinct?
Metsfanmax wrote:Funkyterrance wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Any instance of planning without prices.
Yeah, ok, but for the benefit of the audience could you go into a specific personal experience? I mean, my previous example qualifies for planning without prices right?
The standard economic analysis ought not to apply to conservation issues. If we apply that line of thinking, we will end up with no areas untouched by human industrialization (really that has already happened due to global warming though). We ought to preserve these reservoirs of nature rather than find the most economical way to exploit them, or else our ancestors will not be able to appreciate what it is this planet has given them. That is far more valuable than any short term profit that can be made from the land, even if it's hard to quantify.
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