Spencer reviewed Small is beautiful by E. F. Schumacher
Review of 'Small is beautiful' on 'Goodreads'
2 stars
Gave up halfway through, nothing bad, but just didn't keep my interest.
Small Is Beautiful: A Study of Economics As If People Mattered is a collection of essays published in 1973 by German-born British economist E. F. Schumacher. The title "Small Is Beautiful" came from a principle espoused by Schumacher's teacher Leopold Kohr (1909–1994) advancing small, appropriate technologies, policies, and polities as a superior alternative to the mainstream ethos of "bigger is better". Overlapping environmental, social, and economic forces such as the 1973 energy crisis and popularisation of the concept of globalisation helped bring Schumacher's Small Is Beautiful critiques of mainstream economics to a wider audience during the 1970s. In 1995 The Times Literary Supplement ranked Small Is Beautiful among the 100 most influential books published since World War II. A further edition with commentaries was published in 1999.
Gave up halfway through, nothing bad, but just didn't keep my interest.
Many of the criticisms in the reviews are true, but if we would have listened to this guy (even if only on fossil fuels)... How many lives could have been saved? How much better lives would we have? It's depressing to see how clearly the disasters were seen coming and how belligerently our society doubled down on greed, selfishness, and destruction.