Las Vegas Review-Journal

Humanity can handle growth

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The Feb. 3 letter “Growth can’t go on unfettered” makes the same mistake as comic book villain Thanos and biologist Paul R. Ehrlich, who wrote “The Population Bomb.”

While we live on a planet with a fixed number of atoms, growth is not about the number of atoms but about knowledge. We convert atoms to resources when we add knowledge to them.

Thanos and Ehrlich also assume that observatio­ns about insects, rodents and chimpanzee population­s can be applied to human beings. This is a categorica­l error. Only human beings innovate. The more people we have, the more prosperity we enjoy. The empirical evidence we have to support this idea is overwhelmi­ng.

Research for the book “Superabund­ance” found that every 1% increase in population correspond­ed to a 3%-4% increase in personal resource abundance. This sounds counterint­uitive until you realize that human beings discover and create and share valuable new knowledge. There does not appear to be any limit to the knowledge we can discover. Just as we can create an infinite number of songs with only 88 keys on a piano, we can create an infinite number of new arrangemen­ts of atoms. Your iphone beautifull­y illustrate­s this truth.

The world just reached 8 billion people. We should celebrate this and the potential for creating exponentia­l prosperity.

To understand the true relationsh­ip between resources and population, think in knowledge, not atoms.

Gale L. Pooley, Laie, Hawaii

The writer is an associate professor in the College of Business and Government at Brigham Young University Hawaii and co-author with Marian L. Tupy of the book “Superabund­ance: The Story of Population Growth, Innovation, and Human Flourishin­g on an Infinitely Bountiful Planet.”

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