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The Infinite Resource: The Power of Ideas on a Finite Planet by Naam, Ramez (4/9/2013) Paperback

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 137 ratings

The most valuable resource on earth is not oil, gold, water, or land. Instead, our capacity for expanding human knowledge is our greatest resource, and the key to overcoming the very real and enormous environmental challenges we face. Throughout human history we have learned to overcome scarcity and adversity through the application of innovation - the only resource that is expanded, not depleted, the more we use it. The century ahead is a race between our damaging overconsumption and our growing understanding of ways to capture and utilize abundant natural resources with less impact on the planet. The Infinite Resource is a clear-eyed, visionary, and hopeful argument for progress.
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Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00C7ET1XE
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.08 pounds
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 137 ratings

About the author

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Ramez Naam
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Ramez Naam was born in Cairo, Egypt, and came to the US at the age of 3. He's a computer scientist who spent 13 years at Microsoft, leading teams working on email, web browsing, search, and artificial intelligence. He holds almost 20 patents in those areas.

Ramez is the winner of the 2005 H.G. Wells Award for his non-fiction book More Than Human: Embracing the Promise of Biological Enhancement. He's worked as a life guard, has climbed mountains, backpacked through remote corners of China, and ridden his bicycle down hundreds of miles of the Vietnam coast. He lives in Seattle, where he writes and speaks full time.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
137 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 10, 2013
I think of myself as a "rational optimist." A couple of years ago, I read and reviewed a book of that title by Matt Ridley. Ridley's central theme is the crucial role of trade in the growth of civilization and human well-being - starting with the trade of goods and services that allowed people to become specialized, resulting in more of everything for everyone. But when people learned to trade in ideas, that led to innovation, stimulating the growth of science, technology, and social institutions - things like universities, democracy, and the market economy are all inventions of the human mind (usually many human minds).

I just read another book on this same general idea, the critical role of innovation and the exchange of ideas. I really like "The Infinite Resource: The Power of Ideas on a Finite Planet" by Ramez Naam. Ideas and innovations truly are an infinite resource, and Naam believes (as do I) that in most situations, market forces are the most effective way to implement ideas and solve problems. He also believes that the major area where the market has failed is in "tragedy of the commons," situations such as pollution of air and water, over-fishing, and greenhouse gas emissions. When there is no direct cost for the use or abuse of such shared resources, these "externalities" cannot be affected by market forces. When such factors do have associated costs, these can drive innovation to find better solutions faster than (say) direct government regulation. Reduction of acid rain and the recovery of the Antarctic "ozone hole" are examples of the success of this approach. It could work for greenhouse gases, too, even if ideas like a carbon tax or carbon trade credits sound scary to some people. Even if some energy prices were to go up temporarily, it would provide the incentive for innovative people and companies to find ways to lower costs and gain a competitive advantage. Innovation needs something to work on, and when it has it, it can work fast.

Naam believes that we have plenty of resources on this planet to support 10 billion or more people in American-level affluence if we can learn to use resources more efficiently, especially the huge influx of solar energy that hits the Earth every day. Certainly "old solar" (fossil fuel) resources like oil, gas, and coal are finite. As he says, "Every solar panel built makes solar energy cheaper. Every barrel of oil extracted makes oil more expensive." He also advocates some innovations that are controversial, such as genetically modified organisms (GMO's) in the food supply and increased nuclear power as part of our energy solution. I agree with him on these points. The alternatives are worse - we need GMO's to improve yields and nutritional value, and to reduce pesticide use (and forest clearing) if we are to support billions more humans in the next 30+ years. And although we are everywhere bathed in more than enough solar energy to run the planet with safe, local, non-carbon-emitting power for billions of years, until innovation leads to more advanced storage systems for dark and windless times, solar and wind power can only be part of the energy solution. Burning more coal is bad for a number of reasons, including carbon emissions and radiation (coal plants release more radiation into the atmosphere than nuclear power plants).

I think this book is well worth reading for fresh perspectives on innovation, environmental issues, and much more. I will finish with a couple of quotes that I like:

Our problem in the near term is not that resources are in short supply. It's that we use those resources incredibly inefficiently, with side effects we have yet to eliminate.

For all practical effects and purposes, our growth is unbounded. If we choose wisely, and tap into the right resources, while acting together to put limits on the negative side effects and externalities of our actions, then we can grow for at least centuries to come, and perhaps longer.

Our only limit, for the foreseeable future, is our collective intelligence in innovating, and in putting in place the systems to guide our collective behavior.

Easier said than done, I know, and if you live in the US, such optimism may be especially hard to fathom at the moment, as the Republican controlled House of Representatives holds us all hostage in an ideologically driven federal government shutdown and threatened debt default. But I still believe that enough humans on this planet are sane and clever that we will probably make it through the next few hundred years, with more humans every year living better off than ever before. Just maybe not in the US.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2013
A good overview of the likely set of global challenges our generation and our children's generation face, and of the most likely way out of the problem. I like the way the author uses the metaphor of the global brain, and the notion that ideas undergo a turbocharged form of evolution via a form of natural selection.

As Ray Kurzweil does in his writings, the author spends quite a bit of time reminding us how technology, ideas, and their impact on society grows exponentially. While we tend to overestimate the effect of exponential growth in the short term, we underestimate it in the long term. Although year to year we don't necessarily feel the impact of better ideas and technology on our lives, the author effectively illustrates the huge jumps we have made in productivity, resource efficiency, and overall well-being compared to the corresponding levels just a few generations ago. And the size of the global brain (the number of people able to contribute to the set of ideas available to first world citizens), which has grown by hundreds of millions over the past century, is set to grow by billions this century. It is this resource, argues the author, that is humanity's greatest resource, and could be its saving grace, considering the problems our environment faces.

One hopes that the power of ideas and technology will be enough to overcome the monumental challenges which face us in the coming 30-60 years. The author does a reasonable job of persuading the reader of a hopeful outlook, but history has taught us that the future usually turns out different from how even the smartest people envision it. The best ideas of humanity generally prevailed in the last century. Let's hope they do so in this one as well.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2015
A modified form of this began as a letter sent to Jeff Bezos, CEO, at Amazon. The bureaucrats of the Amazon mail room sent it back unopened. Since one of the two ideas in the letter referenced my evaluation of The infinite resource by Ramez Naam I am posting it here:

An idea came out of reading a wonderful book by Ramez Naam, titled The infinite resource: the power of ideas on a finite planet. After reading it I had an impulse to send gift copies to all the U.S. Senators and Representatives, which unfortunately is beyond my means. That generated this idea. Have you ever considered setting up an annual Amazon Prize for a recent book that best presents constructive ideas for the betterment of society? The selection process should be open to wide public involvement and media coverage, so that the process itself would be conducive to spreading constructive ideas from the candidate books. Perhaps you could make use of C-Span’s BookTV for this. By the time the Prize was announced many of those books could be on the desks of the people who could implement the ideas presented in them. In addition to a monetary award to the winning author, Amazon would send gift copies of the winning book to key public officials.

The other idea: One feature of a great library missing from the experience of on-line book shopping is browsing. I think that a very close simulacrum could be provided. This involves making use of the Dewey Decimal, the Library of Congress, or some other book classification system to order a query. Some filters should be available, such as language, print status (in print or not), and publication date range. While a vertical display of author and title might be more efficient in terms of space considerations, a horizontal presentation with author, title, and perhaps a small icon of the book cover would be closer to the browsing experience. The horizontal list could wrap several times to make better use of screen space. There should be clickable arrow icons at each end of the list to move forward and back—perhaps two icons at either end: one for single stepping and one for page stepping. The items in the list should be clickable to take the user to the Amazon page for the chosen book. If the user initiates the query from a particular book, that book would appear in the center of the initial presentation. For example, if the screen presentation was made in five rows, the book from which the browse request was initiated would appear in the center of the third row. If the user did not have an appropriate book to start his subject search he should be able to click to initially generate the top level classifications of the Dewey, Library of Congress, or whatever subject classification system is used. By successively clicking on sub-classifications and generating new screens he could drill down to the exact subject he was interested in. He should also be able to step back in the classification lists to accommodate a flexible subject search. From the final point of his search he could initiate the query.

To the reader of this review who finds merit in these ideas and knows how to forward them to Mr. Bezos for his consideration: your assistance would be warmly appreciated.
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Top reviews from other countries

A. D. Thibeault
5.0 out of 5 stars A Brief Summary and Review
Reviewed in Canada on April 24, 2013
*A full executive summary of this book is available at newbooksinbrief dot com.

Ever since the industrial revolution the developed world (and increasingly the developing world) has enjoyed remarkable economic growth. This economic growth has yielded wealth to a degree previously unimaginable. Indeed, many of us today enjoy conveniences, comforts and opportunities of a kind that have traditionally been unattainable by even the world’s wealthiest and most powerful people.

However, we may question just how sustainable all of this economic growth (and the resulting wealth) really is. For the economic growth has been accompanied by environmental depletion and degradation of a kind as unprecedented as the growth itself. And while some of the environmental crises that have come up along the way have been solved by new technologies, others yet remain, and are as daunting as any we have seen. Climate change in particular stands out as one of the greatest challenges we now face. What’s worse, many of the earth’s resources that we have used to generate the economic growth are dwindling, and face extinction. Indeed, the very resource that has powered the industrial era (and that has also caused many of our deepest environmental woes), fossil fuels, has now nearly peaked.

Looking to the past, we find that we would not be the first civilization to perish at the hands of a resource shortage brought on by overzealous extraction. Indeed, such an event has occurred on several occasions (including amongst the Mayan civilization, and that of the Easter Islanders).

So we find ourselves at a crossroads, unsure of whether our impressive economic growth can continue, and equally unsure of whether our lavish lifestyle lives but on borrowed time (and resources).

For writer Ramez Naam, though, we do have reason to be optimistic, and in his new book The Infinite Resource: The Power of Ideas on a Finite Planet Naam lays out the reasons for his optimism. To begin with, Naam argues that the natural resources on our planet are far from running out. He assures us that there is enough water and arable land on the earth’s surface, minerals in the earth’s crust, and energy from the sun to feed the demands of the planet’s plateauing population for time out of mind (especially when we reuse and recycle these resources, which is what we are increasingly doing).

The problem, at present, is our relative inefficiency in accessing these resources. Even here, though, Naam argues, there is room for optimism. For our saving grace is our ability to innovate. It is our ability to innovate, Naam maintains, that is responsible for virtually all of our progress and economic growth to this point. It has brought us everything from the first stone tools and the ability to harness fire, to phones that fit in our pockets and allow us to access a world of information and all the world’s people. Along the way (and more to the point), our ability to innovate has allowed us to access an ever greater percentage of the earth’s resources (while at the same time decreasing the relative amount of resources that each of uses to achieve an increasingly affluent lifestyle).

And the really wonderful thing about our ability to innovate is that, unlike natural resources, it does not shrink over time. Rather, it only expands. This is because innovation is built on ideas, and ideas themselves only grow and multiply. Ideas can even be shared without ever being diluted. Instead, the sharing of ideas often generates even more ideas. The power of ideas—and the innovation that goes along with it—truly is an infinite resource.

Now, wherever there has been an incentive to innovate, innovation has come, and this helps explain why the market economy has been the single biggest spur to innovation ever invented. The market economy harnesses innovation by way of tying useful inventions to economic gain, thus exploiting self-interest for the benefit of all. Up until recently, a relatively small proportion of the world lived under a market economy. Not coincidentally, these were also the most inventive and affluent parts of the world. In the past 40 years, though, an ever increasing portion of the world has switched over to a more market-oriented economy, and this has greatly accelerated both economic growth and the speed of innovation. For Naam, this trend bodes very well for the future.

Now, as powerful as the market system is, Naam does concede that it has one fatal flaw. And this is that it does not put an accurate price on the degradation of communal goods, such as the environment. The end result is that the environment is not cared for as well as it might be (this phenomenon is known as ‘The Tragedy of the Commons’). Nevertheless, a market economy can be tweaked to ensure that a price is put on environmental degradation. Indeed, this has happened before, and it has helped put an end to several environmental crises (including, recently, both acid rain and the ozone-hole threat).

For Naam, this approach is also the best way to deal with the greatest environmental threat we now face: global warming. Specifically, Naam argues we ought to put a price on carbon dioxide (and return the tax proceeds to the people). This would not only help ensure against global warming, but also hasten the inevitable transition to the use of solar power and clean fuels to meet our energy needs.

With the right approach and policies, Naam argues, we can live in a world of plenty for all (and one that is clean to boot).

This is a brilliant book. The writing is excellent, the logical flow is superb, the supporting evidence is well-chosen and extensive, and the argument is air tight. In a world that is dominated by fear-mongering on the one hand, and blind optimism on the other, Naam is a shining beacon of sober and rational thought. If you are looking for a big-picture view of the challenges we face and how best to meet them, this book is for you. A full executive summary of the book is available at newbooksinbrief dot com; a podcast discussion of the book will be available soon.
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David Rooke
5.0 out of 5 stars Now we need the politicians to read it!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 2, 2013
This is an exceptional book, of importance not so much for its literary style (though it is highly readable) as for the logical well founded way it sets out the problems we all collectively face AND provides some solutions that give real hope AND a strawman roadmap to implementation of those solutions. THIS IS AN IMPORTANT BOOK.

Ramez for global President/CEO? I am sure he is much too sensible to take on such a thankless task but the biggest challenge is how to get a book that makes this much sense and is in no sense party political into the hands and minds of every politician and key influencer and decision maker so that the necessary actions start to be taken - primarily around fixing the market so the problems we face become a major focus fo the combined brainpower of 7 billion. Gosh - it doesn't even sound that hard! The ill effects of smoking was a battle that has been won in many countries around the world against corporate vested interest for overwhelming common good and the challenge here is similar and even more important.

The thing that really cheered me is that there ARE very likely solutions which are workable and achievable at the necessary scale if we apply ourselves. I get so fed up with "token greenism" which does nothing to address the scale of the problem we all face, and the divorced from reality stance that the Green Party takes.

Ramez does not come across as a zealot or extremist, nor does he try to solve all the problems of the world, and this allows the central issues to be examined with thoroughness, impartiality and credibility.

Well done - I will buy a copy for my MP as a start, buy a copy and one for your MP too!
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G. Budrikis
4.0 out of 5 stars A different view
Reviewed in Australia on February 15, 2014
Most books about the future are, in one way or another, pessimistic. This one is different. The author's main point is that, provided we get the politics right, human ingenuity will solve our problems. He makes a good case and writes well. Well worth a read.
Alok
4.0 out of 5 stars A provoking read at least
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 3, 2018
His presentation of the issues humanity faces today is clear and precise. The evidence he provides to argue his faith in infinite progress is not equally robust.
Amazon Customer
3.0 out of 5 stars Strong analysis, weak premises, cool reasoning
Reviewed in Canada on October 2, 2015
The book is well argued and factual. It sets out what the author believes to be accurate data and makes reasonable arguments on the basis of that data. As a planner of a campaign I think the author would be excellent. My objection is confined to the author's premises. He has bought into the concept of catastrophic global warming caused by man alone. No palliating or mediating factor interferes with this vision. Natural cycles, politically motivated exaggeration, and policy-based evidence making never disturb the tranquility of his thinking: it is linear from premise to conclusion. I think he is one of the warmists with whom one might just possibly have a reasonable discussion, and that is a compliment. Ramez Naam is well informed. But to a CO2 catastrophist, I can readily imagine he might seem weak in faith and fervor, because of his cool analysis. You will have to make up your own mind. For my part, I tired of arguing with it, and put it down. But those concerned with man-caused global warming might find considerable virtue in this book. I did.