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Telling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives

<!--HTML--><p>In these days we are told that we are living in a "post-truth" world in which facts are no longer significant or relevant.&nbsp; This statement is misleading.&nbsp; There is nothing wrong with the world we are living in, the problem is that we are no longe...

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Autor principal: Giampietro, Mario
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2289053
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author Giampietro, Mario
author_facet Giampietro, Mario
author_sort Giampietro, Mario
collection CERN
description <!--HTML--><p>In these days we are told that we are living in a "post-truth" world in which facts are no longer significant or relevant.&nbsp; This statement is misleading.&nbsp; There is nothing wrong with the world we are living in, the problem is that we are no longer capable of understanding it.&nbsp; We cannot understand it, because we are using obsolete narratives and analytical tools developed decades ago to interpret a "reality" that no longer exists.&nbsp; The talk starts with an overview of "conceptual blunders" used right now to frame the analysis of sustainability.&nbsp; These blunders are behind the assumption that we will be able to sustain further economic growth by implementing a more circular economy, using the rationale of bioeconomy, reaching zero-emissions, and by developing green-energy.&nbsp; The widespread acceptance of these assumptions flags the existence of a serious crisis in sustainability science, that is incapable of handling complexity.&nbsp; In fact, dealing with sustainability issues requires the ability of integrating in a coherent representation information referring to different dimensions and different scales of analysis.&nbsp; This result is outside the reach of reductionism.&nbsp; In the final part, the talk illustrates the existence of new scientific approaches based on complexity theory (relational analysis) and new conceptualizations of the interaction of human societies and their environment (the metabolic pattern of social-ecological systems) that can improve the usefulness of scientific inputs to be used for governance</p>
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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publishDate 2017
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spelling cern-22890532022-11-02T22:19:35Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2289053engGiampietro, MarioTelling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narrativesTelling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narrativesCERN Colloquium<!--HTML--><p>In these days we are told that we are living in a "post-truth" world in which facts are no longer significant or relevant.&nbsp; This statement is misleading.&nbsp; There is nothing wrong with the world we are living in, the problem is that we are no longer capable of understanding it.&nbsp; We cannot understand it, because we are using obsolete narratives and analytical tools developed decades ago to interpret a "reality" that no longer exists.&nbsp; The talk starts with an overview of "conceptual blunders" used right now to frame the analysis of sustainability.&nbsp; These blunders are behind the assumption that we will be able to sustain further economic growth by implementing a more circular economy, using the rationale of bioeconomy, reaching zero-emissions, and by developing green-energy.&nbsp; The widespread acceptance of these assumptions flags the existence of a serious crisis in sustainability science, that is incapable of handling complexity.&nbsp; In fact, dealing with sustainability issues requires the ability of integrating in a coherent representation information referring to different dimensions and different scales of analysis.&nbsp; This result is outside the reach of reductionism.&nbsp; In the final part, the talk illustrates the existence of new scientific approaches based on complexity theory (relational analysis) and new conceptualizations of the interaction of human societies and their environment (the metabolic pattern of social-ecological systems) that can improve the usefulness of scientific inputs to be used for governance</p>oai:cds.cern.ch:22890532017
spellingShingle CERN Colloquium
Giampietro, Mario
Telling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives
title Telling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives
title_full Telling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives
title_fullStr Telling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives
title_full_unstemmed Telling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives
title_short Telling the story of Sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives
title_sort telling the story of sustainability quantitatively: a critical appraisal of todays' narratives
topic CERN Colloquium
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2289053
work_keys_str_mv AT giampietromario tellingthestoryofsustainabilityquantitativelyacriticalappraisaloftodaysnarratives