A "lit critter" named Kenneth Burke made the following footnote remark in a
1937 book:

"Among the sciences, there is one little fellow named Ecology, and in time
we shall pay him more attention. He teaches us that the total economy of
this planet cannot be guided by an efficient rationale of exploitation
alone, but that the exploiting part must itself eventually suffer if it too
greatly disturbs the balance of the whole (as big beasts would starve, if
they succeeded in catching all the little beasts that are their prey their
very lack of efficiency in the exploitation of their ability as hunters thus
acting as efficiency on a higher level, where considerations of balance
count for more than consideration of one tracked purposiveness)."

How many economists were building "good" economic models in 1937 that
incorporated ecological balance as part of their perceived reality? To what
extent do mainstream economists do so today? The same lit critter Burke also
said the following in a 1935 speech to the American Writers Congress:

"'Myths' may be wrong, or they may be used to bad ends but they cannot be
dispensed with. In the last analysis, they are our basic psychological tools
for working together. A hammer is a carpenter's tool-, a wrench is a
mechanic's tool; and a "myth" is the social tool for welding the sense of
interrelationship by which the carpenter and the mechanic, though
differently occupied, can work together for common social ends. In this
sense a myth that works well is as real as food, tools, and shelter are. As
compared with the reality of material objects, however, we might say that
the myth deals with a secondary order of reality: Totem, race, godhead,
nationality, class, lodge, guild all such are the "myths" that have made
various ranges and kinds of social cooperation possible. They are not
"illusions," since they perform a very real and necessary social function in
the organizing of the mind. But they may look illusory when they survive as
fossils from the situations for which they were adapted into changed
situations for which they are not adapted."

I want to call attention especially to the last sentence in which Burke
talks about what happens when the myths "survive as fossils" in changed
circumstances. When Tim Jackson refers to the "myth of economic growth" in
the Sustainable Development Commission report, "Prosperity without Growth?",
he mainly is calling attention to the failure of growth to deliver the goods
in terms of social equity, economic stability and environmental
sustainability.

All I'm trying to do is call attention to a deeper analysis of myth in which
it can be seen that the status of the constituent terms (economy, growth,
measurement) themselves is in question. Even Burke concedes that myths can
function as social tools. The point is, however, that just because they did
once serve as tools doesn't mean they still do or that they are necessarily
the best social tools under the circumstances. If new social tools are
required, there is nothing in the constitution of reality that requires
those new tools to necessarily be designed in some one-to-one correspondence
with an analogy of the old tools.

-- 
Sandwichman
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