Book Review: Seeing Like a State [Classic]

Published: Sept. 7, 2019, 10:01 a.m.

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Link:\\xa0https://slatestarcodex.com/2017/03/16/book-review-seeing-like-a-state/

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Seeing Like A State\\xa0is the book G.K. Chesterton would have written if he had gone into economic history instead of literature. Since he didn\\u2019t, James Scott had to write it a century later. The wait was worth it.

Scott starts with the story of \\u201cscientific forestry\\u201d in 18th century Prussia. Enlightenment rationalists noticed that peasants were just cutting down whatever trees happened to grow in the forests,\\xa0like a chump. They came up with a better idea: clear all the forests and replace them by planting identical copies of Norway spruce (the highest-lumber-yield-per-unit-time tree) in an evenly-spaced rectangular grid. Then you could just walk in with an axe one day and chop down like a zillion trees an hour and have more timber than you could possibly ever want.

This went poorly. The impoverished ecosystem couldn\\u2019t support the game animals and medicinal herbs that sustained the surrounding peasant villages, and they suffered an economic collapse. The endless rows of identical trees were a perfect breeding ground for plant diseases and forest fires. And the complex ecological processes that sustained the soil stopped working, so after a generation the Norway spruces grew stunted and malnourished. Yet for some reason, everyone involved got promoted, and \\u201cscientific forestry\\u201d spread across Europe and the world.

And this pattern repeats with suspicious regularity across history, not just in biological systems but also in social ones.

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