Earth system economics: a biophysical approach to the human component of the Earth system
-
Published:2021-05-27
Issue:2
Volume:12
Page:671-687
-
ISSN:2190-4987
-
Container-title:Earth System Dynamics
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Dynam.
Abstract
Abstract. The study of humans has largely been carried out in isolation from the study of the non-human Earth system. This isolation has encouraged the development of incompatible philosophical, aspirational, and methodological approaches that have proven very difficult to integrate with those used for the non-human remainder of the Earth system. Here, an approach is laid out for the scientific study of the global human system that is intended to facilitate seamless integration with non-human processes by striving for a consistent physical basis, for which the name Earth system economics is proposed. The approach is typified by a foundation on state variables, central among which is the allocation of time amongst activities by human populations, and an orientation towards considering human experience. A framework is elaborated which parses the Earth system into six classes of state variables, including a neural structure class that underpins many essential features of humanity. A working example of the framework is then illustrated with a simple numerical model, considering a global population that is engaged in one of two waking activities: provisioning food or doing something else. The two activities are differentiated by their motivational factors, outcomes on state variables, and associated subjective experience. While the illustrative model is a gross simplification of reality, the results suggest how neural characteristics and subjective experience can emerge from model dynamics. The approach is intended to provide a flexible and widely applicable strategy for understanding the human–Earth system, appropriate for physically based assessments of the past and present, as well as contributing to long-term model projections that are naturally oriented towards improving human well-being.
Funder
H2020 European Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference68 articles.
1. Alessandretti, L., Aslak, U., and Lehmann, S.: The scales of human mobility, Nature, 587, 402–407, 2020. a 2. Alexander, P., Brown, C., Arneth, A., Finnigan, J., Moran, D., and Rounsevell, M. D.: Losses, inefficiencies and waste in the global food system, Agr. Syst., 153, 190–200, 2017. a, b 3. Alexander, R., Aragón, O. R., Bookwala, J., Cherbuin, N., Gatt, J. M., Kahrilas, I. J., Kästner, N., Lawrence, A., Lowe, L., Morrison, R. G., Muel<span id="page686"/>ler, S. C., Nusslock, R., Papadelis, C., Polnaszek, K. L., Richter, S. H., Silton, R. L., and Styliadis, C.: The Neuroscience of Positive Emotions and Affect: Implications for Cultivating Happiness and Wellbeing, Neurosci. Biobehav. Rev., 121, 220–249, 2020. a 4. Anderson, K.: Wrong tool for the job: Debating the bedrock of climate-change mitigation scenarios, Nature, 573, 348–348, 2019. a 5. Anderson, P. W.: More is different, Science, 177, 393–396, 1972. a
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|