His most recent nonfiction book, on accelerating innovation to overcome environmental and natural resource challenges, is The Infinite Resource: The Power of
Ideas on a Finite Planet.
His works include The Infinite Resource: The Power of
Ideas on a Finite Planet, Nexus, Crux, More Than Human: Embracing the Promise of Biological Enhancement and Apex.
A refutation of Jeremy Grantham from Ramez Naan, author of The Infinite Resource: The Power of
Ideas on a Finite Planet.
Ramez Naam, the Seattle - based author of «The Infinite Resource: The Power of
Ideas On a Finite Planet,» has supported labeling, saying, among other things:
(It'd be great to have a bracketing talk by Ramez Naam, the author of «The Infinite Resource: The Power of
Ideas on a Finite Planet.»)
Not exact matches
But it certainly doesn't hurt to try, given the extraordinary gulfs
on the
planet now between haves and have nots, the signs that business as usual will be hard to fit
on a
finite, increasingly human - shaped
planet and the fast - expanding capacity to share and shape
ideas in ways that smooth the human journey.
Here's my talk, «Building the #Knowosphere: How new ways to share and shape
ideas can help build durable progress
on a
finite planet»:
With appropriate guidance, students can not only develop story - and
idea - sharing skills that mesh written and audiovisual output, but put those skills to use even as they learn, potentially playing a role in fostering progress
on a
finite planet.
But this
idea is increasingly strained by the knowledge that,
on a
finite planet, the economy can't grow forever.
We can argue about what they are and when they will hit, but the
idea of an infinite growth
on a
finite planet is quite delusional.
«Building the «Knowosphere»: How new ways to share and shape
ideas can help build durable progress
on a
finite planet»