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An Inquiry into the Human Prospect: Looked at Again for the 1990s

An Inquiry into the Human Prospect: Looked at Again for the 1990sCreator: Robert L. Heilbroner
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Category: Book

Buy Used: $0.01
as of 5/22/2012 01:06 CDT details

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New (16) Used (52) Collectible (1) from $0.01

Seller: Blue Cloud Books
Sales Rank: 1,300,474

Media: Paperback
Edition: 2 Revised
Pages: 208
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 0.8 x 0.5 x 0.1

ISBN: 0393961850
Dewey Decimal Number: 303
EAN: 9780393961850
ASIN: 0393961850

Publication Date: August 17, 1991
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: This book has a light amount of wear to the pages, cover and binding. Blue Cloud Books รข?" Hot deals from the land of the sun.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Inquiry into the Human Prospect (Updated and Reconsidered for the 1980s)
  • Paperback - An Inquiry Into the Human Prospect; Updated & Reconsidered for the 1980s,
  • Hardcover - An Inquiry into the Human Prospect - Updated and Reconsidered for the 1980'S (Cloth)

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Product Description

Is there hope for man? That "terrible question" was posed by Robert L. Heilbroner in the original version of An Inquiry into the Human Prospect.

In this third edition of a book that has become a classic, Professor Heilbroner leaves the question in place on the first page, believing some twenty years later that that interrogative sounds the themes of the 1990s as well. The main components of the global predicament he described in the first edition are still with us today: runaway populations, obliterative weaponry, and a closing environmental vise.

Writing now, in the aftermath of the extraordinary events that caused communism as a challenger to capitalism to vanish "like a puff of smoke," Professor Heilbroner traces out the difficulties that beset those attempting centrally planned economics. He shows how Soviet-style systems became mired in bureaucratic swamps. But he warns that the triumph of profit-driven, market-directed economies will not delay the looming encounter with the ecological barrier. "The absorption capacities of the environment," writes Professor Heilbroner, "whether in terms of the greenhouse effect or the overrunning of other physico-chemical capabilities of the planet" still determine the limits of the economic expansion.

Trenchant and unflinching, Professor Heilbroner's look at the sum and substance of our prospects for the remaining years of this century is provocative and indispensable reading for those who prefer not to avert their gaze from the hard realities of our times.





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