The essence of this book can be found in a line written by the ancient Roman Stoic Philosopher Lucius Annaeus Seneca: "Fortune is of sluggish growth, but ruin is rapid". This sentence summarizes the features of the phenomenon that we call "collapse", which is typically sudden and often unexpected, like the proverbial "house of cards". But why are such collapses so common, and what generates them?
Several books have been published on the subject, including the well-known Collapse by Jared Diamond (2005), The Collapse of Complex Societies by Joseph Tainter (1998) and The Tipping Point, by Malcom Gladwell (2000). Why The Seneca Effect? The Seneca Effect is an ambitious attempt to pull these various strands together by describing collapse from a multi-disciplinary viewpoint. The reader will discover how collapse is a collective phenomenon that occurs in what we call today "complex systems", with a special emphasis on system dynamics and the concept of "feedback". From this foundation, Bardi applies the theory to real-world systems, from the mechanics of fracture and the collapse of large structures to financial collapses, famines and population collapses, the fall of entire civilizations, and the most dreadful collapse we can imagine: that of the planetary ecosystem generated by overexploitation and climate change.
The final objective of the book is to describe a conclusion that the ancient stoic philosophers had already discovered long ago, but that modern system science has rediscovered today. If you want to avoid collapse you need to embrace change, not fight it. Neither a book about doom and gloom nor a cornucopianist's dream, The Seneca Effect goes to the heart of the challenges that we are facing today, helping us to manage our future rather than be managed by it.
- Introduction
- Seneca's times: The fall of the Roman Empire
- The Seneca collapse as a critical phenomenon: why do things break?
- Networks: the Seneca collapse of complex structures
- Fast and Furious Seneca: Financial collapses
- Destroying what keeps you alive: the tragedy of the commons
- The World as a Giant Bathtub: the Seneca Collapse of Complex Systems
- World models and the collapse of everything
- The dark heart of the fossil empires
- Malthus was an optimist: famines and population collapses
- The Seneca asteroid: climate change as the ultimate collapse
- Managing complex systems: how to pull the levers in the right direction
- Conclusion: How to euthanize an empire
Ugo Bardi teaches physical chemistry at the University of Florence, in Italy. He is interested in resource depletion, system dynamics modeling, climate science and renewable energy. He is member of the scientific committee of ASPO (Association for the study of peak oil) and regular contributor of The Oil Drum and Resilience.org. His blog in English is called Cassandra's Legacy. His most recent book in English is Extracted: How the Quest for Global Mining Wealth is Plundering the Planet (Chelsea Green, 2014). He is also the author of The Limits to Growth Revisited (Springer 2011).