Garrett Hardin

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Garrett Hardin
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Garrett Hardin

Garrett James Hardin (April 21, 1915September 14, 2003) was a leading and controversial ecologist from Dallas, Texas, who was most known for his 1968 paper, The Tragedy of the Commons. He is also known for Hardin's First Law of Ecology, which states "You cannot do only one thing". He also coined the ubiquitous phrase "Nice guys finish last" as a summing up of the "Selfish Gene" concept of life and evolution.

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[edit] Biography

Hardin received a B.S. in zoology from the University of Chicago in 1936 and a PhD in microbiology from Stanford University in 1941. Moving to the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1946, he served there as Professor of Human Ecology from 1963 until his (nominal) retirement in 1978.

A major focus of his career, and one to which he returned repeatedly, was the issue of human overpopulation. This led to writings on controversial subjects such as abortion, which earned him criticism from the right, and immigration and sociobiology, which earned him criticism from the left. In his essays he also tackled subjects such as conservation and creationism.

In 1994 he was one of 52 signatories on "Mainstream Science on Intelligence", an editorial written by Linda Gottfredson and published in the Wall Street Journal, which defended the findings on race and intelligence in The Bell Curve.

Hardin and his wife Jane were both members of the Hemlock Society (now Compassion & Choices), and believed in individuals choosing their own time to die. They committed suicide in their Santa Barbara home in September 2003, shortly after their 62nd wedding anniversary. He was 88 and she was 81 [1].

[edit] Publications

[edit] Journal articles

  • Hardin, G. (1968). The Tragedy of the Commons. Science 162, 1243-1248.
  • Hardin, G. (1971). Population, biology and law. Journal of Urban Law 48, 563-578.
  • Hardin, G. (1974). Lifeboat Ethics: the Case Against Helping the Poor. Psychology Today, 8, 38-43.
  • Hardin, G. (1976). Living with Faustian Bargain. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 32, 25-29.
  • Hardin, G. (1980). Ecology and the death of Providence. Zygon 15, 57-68.
  • Hardin, G. (1982). Discriminating altruisms. Zygon 17, 163-186.
  • Hardin, G. (1983). Is violence natural? Zygon 18, 405-413.
  • Hardin, G. (1985). Human-ecology - the subversive, conservative science. American Zoologist 25, 469-476.
  • Hardin, G. (1986). Cultural carrying-capacity - a biological approach to human problems. Bioscience 36, 599-606.
  • Hardin, G. (1994). The Tragedy of the Unmanaged Commons. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 9, 199-199.
  • Hardin, G. (1998). Extensions of "The Tragedy of the Commons". Science 280, 682-683.

[edit] Books

  • Nature and Man's Fate (1965) New American Library. ISBN 0-451-61170-5
  • Exploring new ethics for survival: the voyage of the spaceship Beagle (1972) Viking Press. ISBN 0-670-30268-6
  • Promethean Ethics: Living With Death, Competition, and Triage (1980) University of Washington Press. ISBN 0-295-95717-4
  • Naked Emperors: Essays of a Taboo-Stalker (1982) William Kaufmann, Inc. ISBN 0-86576-032-2
  • Filters Against Folly, How to Survive despite Economists, Ecologists, and the Merely Eloquent (1985) Viking Penguin. ISBN 0-670-80410-X
  • Living Within Limits: Ecology, Economics, and Population Taboos (1993) Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509385-2
  • The Ostrich Factor: Our Population Myopia (1999) Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512274-7

Hardin's last book The Ostrich Factor: Our Population Myopia (1999), a warning about the threat of overpopulation to the Earth's sustainable economic future, called for coercive constraints on "unqualified reproductive rights" and argued that affirmative action is a form of racism.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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