BlackBerry 8300

Visiting chez moi.

“As animals get bigger, from tiny shrew to huge blue whale, pulse rates slow down and life spans stretch out longer, conspiring so that the number of heartbeats during an average stay on Earth tends to be roughly the same, around a billion. A mouse just uses them up more quickly than an elephant.”

More biological thoughts from Geoffrey West, President of the Santa Fe Institute.

He recently extended his scaling law analyses from the organism to societies, finding economy of scale analogies in the phenomena of cities. But unlike biology, the exponent is greater than one, implying accelerating growth.

“Cities are where ideas are born… and that is a far more powerful growth stimulant than economies of scale. The presence of qualified professions and entrepreneurs constitutes a reason for a place to grow. If you can create a place that is exciting intellectually, that tends to attract more people. The findings are surprising because they suggest that cities follow growth trajectories that have no biological counterpart. This year, for the first time, more people will live in cities than in rural areas, according to UN projections. At this tipping point in human history, it is worth trying to understand the mechanisms behind urbanisation and where it is headed.” (From New Scientist)

“While most of us imagine idyllic rural America as the epitome of sustainable living, conventional wisdom is exactly backward. Cities are bastions of environmentalism. People who live in densely populated places lead environmentally friendly lives. They consume fewer resources per person and take up less space. And because efficiency scales with the size of the population, big cities are always more efficient than small cities. Bottom line: The secret to creating a more environmentally sustainable society is making our big cities bigger. We need more metropolises. The researchers also found that as cities got bigger, each individual got more productive. A doubling of population led to a more than doubling of creative and economic output.” (excerpts from SEED, July 2007)

(I wanted to test the little camera on my new crackberry, so it was a spontaneous moment…)

7 responses to “Geoffrey West out West”

  1. wise and interesting words – something for certain Green Anarchists to ponder…

  2. That observation about the limit of a billion heartbeats per creature is probably not a hard rule, otherwise why do you explain why parrots live longer than people? Also, I just heard this week that lobsters don’t age and they can live as long as they don’t die from being caught and eaten or mortally injured.

    Interesting observations about cities. I tend to agree that cities are where things are happening… in all aspects of life.

  3. you only have to live in a big city for a few years to realise but I yurn for the great outdoors

  4. Great observations on the efficiencies of cities! Seems so obvious to a city kid like me, but runs counter to the damn American Dream of two cars and two chickens in every pot, with big yard to boot…. But DUH: packing people in uses less energy and means more ideas flowing.

    Here is an old New Yorker piece about how green NYC really is.

    Money quote: "Dense cities are scalable, while sprawling suburbs are not."

    …I’m also impressed with the pic quality on the Crackberry!

  5. Yeah… I was surprised at the quality of that tiny lens. We have some MEMS technology coming out that should really help those tiny cameras (autofocus, zoom, shutter) and at the micro scale the focus is real-time… As you pan around, the image is constantly in focus, like the eye.

    Rocketeer: Dem lobsters are really amazing, but did we doubt for a moment that they are from another planet? =)

  6. Just saw a Brookings Report: "Economic activity and growth between 2014 and 2016 remained disproportionately concentrated in the world’s major metropolitan areas. In 2016, the 300 largest metropolitan areas accounted for a little under one-fourth of the world’s workforce but generated nearly one-half of the world’s production. The economic power of large metropolitan areas derives from the productive environments they offer firms. The density and connectedness of urban areas lower transportation costs and provide businesses the shared pools of labor, infrastructure, and knowledge they need to remain productive. These forces together enhance job creation and economic growth.7 These advantages exceed the costs associated with large, dense cities—such as higher rents or greater traffic congestion—and thus firms and industries continue to concentrate in them."

    And it’s growing:

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