The combination plagues all areas of life, and around 1780 Alexander Hewatt described its consequences in farming:
Like farmers often moving from place to place, the principal study with the planters is the art of making the largest profit for the present time, and if this end is obtained, it gives them little concern how much the land may be exhausted. . . . The richness of the soil, and the vast quantity of lands, have deceived many. . . . This will not be the case much longer, for lands will become scarce, and time and experience, by unfolding the nature of the soil . . . will teach them . . . to alter [their] careless manner of cultivation.
A Sauntering side thought: marriages, lest they grow depleted, need careful continual cultivation.
(The above is quoted from page 122 of Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations, by David R. Montgomery. University of California Press, 2007.)
For a brief biography of Alexander Hewatt, click here. For a brief biography of David R. Montgomery, click here.
Garrett Hardin made a career of telling people about the combination of short-sightedness and greed. For a brief biography of Garrett Hardin, or to read his famous essay, "The Tragedy of the Commons," click here.
Comments