The Covid-19 Pandemic has brought forth global anxiety about linkages between the environment and society at a fundamental structural level. Earthly Order: How Natural Laws Define Human Life provides an accessible exposition of the latest foundational knowledge on how natural and social systems science can inform planetary crises. Humanity has either tried to conquer or capitulate to natural order, whereas we should be seeking to understand latent structures and patterns that permeate all systems and develop an "earthly order," that is socially functional and sustainable. Current debates in politics often present what should constitute a "world order" while scientists have wrestled with what are fundamental conditions of "natural order." Author Saleem H. Ali provides a readable synthesis of these debates with practical guidance for the public with a host of current examples around environmental decision-making by consumers, the government and industry. Twitter: @saleem ali
The Covid-19 Pandemic has brought forth global anxiety about linkages between the environment and society at a fundamental structural level. Earthly Order: How Natural Laws Define Human Life provides an accessible exposition of the latest foundational knowledge on how natural and social systems science can inform planetary crises. Humanity has either tried to conquer or capitulate to natural order, whereas we should be seeking to understand latent structures and patterns that permeate all systems and develop an "earthly order," that is socially functional and sustainable. Current debates in politics often present what should constitute a "world order" while scientists have wrestled with what are fundamental conditions of "natural order." Author Saleem H. Ali provides a readable synthesis of these debates with practical guidance for the public with a host of current examples around environmental decision-making by consumers, the government and industry. Twitter: @saleem ali
PREFACE
Introduction: The Limited Logic of Order?
Two's Company
Chemical Chaos
Functional Order
Part I: NATURAL ORDER
Chapter 1 - Seduction of Structure in Nature
Molecular "Magic"
Quantum Order
Phases and Crystalline Order
Constancy and Hybrid Natural Order
Chapter 2 - The Elements of Earthly Order
The New Carbonic Order?
Nuclear Order
Magnetic Order
Chapter 3 - Circularity, Cyclicality and Sustainability
Hydrological Order
Orders of Gaia and Medea
Organismic Order
Bounded Natural Order
PART 2: ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL ORDER
Chapter 4 - The Orders of Economic Harmony
Urbanism and Resilience in Socioeconomic Order
Scales and Speeds of Economic Order
Currencies of Sustainable Economic Order
Chapter 5 - Elusive Orders of Economic Equilibrium
Orders of Price and Quantity
Consumer Ecology and Varieties of Equilibria
Towards and Optimal Economic Order for the Planet
Chapter 6 - Mindful Errors and Social Order
Lonely Crowds and the Greening of the Shared Economy
Environmental Risk, Uncertainty, and Precautionary Disorder
Gaining from Disorder: Immunity, Intelligence and Religion
The Conspiratorial Conundrum of Cause
Chapter 7 - Sex, Population and Sustainability
From Tragedy to Comedy of the Commons
The Age Beyond Ageing
Gender, Culture and Reconciling Anomalies
PART 3: POLITICAL ORDER
Chapter 8 - Empires and Edens
The Dragon and the Wild Goose
Resource Nationalism
Great Powers Concerts and Radical Salvations
Chapter 9 - Borders and Functional Political Order
The Ambivalence of Ecological Borders
The Order of Environmental Peacebuilding
Identity, Borders and Order
Chapter 10 - From International to Global Order in the
"Anthropocene"
Confederations of Peaceful Ecological Order
Networks and the Realignment of Global Order in the
Anthropocene
Closing the Loop on Global Order
CONCLUSION: Reconciling Orders
Coda: Chromatic Order
ENDNOTES
Saleem H. Ali was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts but grew up in
Lahore, Pakistan until his college years, receiving his Bachelor's
degree in Chemistry from Tufts University, and his Masters and
Ph.D. degrees in environmental policy and planning at Yale and MIT,
respectively. He currently holds the Blue and Gold Distinguished
Professorship in Geography and Spatial Sciences at the University
of Delaware(USA) and is Honorary Professor at the
University of Queensland (Australia). Dr. Ali's laurels include
being a National Geographic Explorer (having travelled for research
to over 150 countries); being chosen as a Young Global Leader by
the World Economic Forum
and serving on the seven-member science panel of the Global
Environment Facility (the world's largest multilateral trust fund
for the environment held in trusteeship by the World Bank). His
earlier books include Treasures of the Earth: Need Greed and a
Sustainable Future which was hailed by Nobel laureate Muhammad
Yunus as providing "welcome linkage between environmental behavior
and poverty alleviation." Professor Ali was profiled in Forbes as
"The Alchemist" and Bookseller called his earlier
work "a pioneering exploration of human wants and needs and the
natural resources we consume." He is a Fellow of the Royal Society
of Art sand the Royal Geographical Society in the United Kingdom
and
also serves on the boards of Adventure Scientists and Mediators
Beyond Borders International. Along with his wife Maria and sons
Shahmir and Shahroze, the family are citizens of Australia,
Pakistan and the United States.
In making his arguments Ali draws from the work of Nobel
prize-winning scientists and his own deep knowledge of philosophy
and history. Anyone anxious about the future of the planet will
benefit from Ali's carefully considered, well-argued insights.
*R. C. Robinson, Georgia State University*
Saleem Ali's new book allows global societies to rediscover nature
through an analysis of planetary order. The narrative clarifies
visions of the future while practically anchored in the present. By
building bridges across disciplines this book provides a pragmatic
way of fostering a more positive relationship between humans and
the earth.
*Izabella Teixeira, Former Environment Minister of Brazil, UNEP
"Champion of the Earth" Awardee*
With Earthly Order, Saleem Ali presents a grand, sprawling
exploration of the scientific realm in search of simplicity in
nature and order in our human planet. What he uncovers is revealing
and provocative in equal measure - a fresh lens to look at the
social, economic, political and environmental challenges of our
unsustainable age
*Professor Iain Stewart, Host of BBC Series, How Earth Made Us,
UNESCO Chair in Geoscience and Society, Royal Scientific Society of
Jordan*
Saleem Ali has at one and the same time assembled a
transdisciplinary tour de force on sustainability from the natural
and social sciences while also making these insights accessible to
broad publics. The systems approach he offers can be a foundation
for sustainability curricula in professional schools and a
much-needed framework for global business, policy and civic leaders
no matter where they hail from on our previous planet.
*Professor Sanjeev Khagram, Director General and Dean, Thunderbird
School of Global Management, Arizona State University*
In an ambitious, yet eminently readable book, Saleem Ali uses a
search for order as an organizing principle across all the scales
of the world, from submicroscopic to the way human societies
interact. I learned something on nearly every page; so will you, as
the author draws us into an affirmative view of a changing,
interrelated, and wondrous world.
*Roald Hoffmann, Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry and Poet, Frank H.
T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters, Emeritus, Cornell
University*
School is all about teaching students about the basic order of
life. But the education of order is not exactly an orderly
education. Broken up across multiple subjects- mathematics,
chemistry, physics, economics - students never get a holistic
picture of how natural laws string together to create the basic
geometry of the human experience. 'Earthly Order' fixes that.
Saleem Ali's new book builds a bridge across the sciences using the
scaffolding of natural laws, delivering the reader a unique and
unifying perspective of life on Earth.
*Lucas Joppa, Chief Environmental Officer, Microsoft
Corporation*
Saleem Ali's new book is a tour de force examining the conceptual
meaning of 'order'. Conversations about changes in economic
systems, social relations, and human identity are hampered by our
inadequate and imprecise thinking about "order": what function it
serves, how it breaks down, and what new possibilities it can
reveal. Ali's book equips us with novel metaphors and analyses to
improve our understanding, debates, and collaborations. Anyone
working on complex social and environmental challenges should read
this.
*Dr. Zia Khan, Senior Vice President of Innovation, The Rockefeller
Foundation*
Earthly Order is a tour de force exploration of how natural laws
operate at all levels of the great hierarchy of human existents,
from the quantum chemistry of our bodies to sustainability cycles
of our planet to economic, social and political structures of our
societies. Three principles prevail: commonality of order in a
general systems theory sense; expanding multiplicity of variables
that generate increasing complexity; and emergence of novel
regularities, qualitatively distinct at various levels. This is a
book for our times.
*Robert Lawrence Kuhn, Host of media series Closer to Truth*
Earthly Order educates, illuminates and challenges, making
connections across great swaths of the domains of knowledge, with
climate change as the overarching motivation for this intellectual
exploration. I found myself pausing after many paragraphs to
consider what Ali had written, often re-reading, as much to
experience the pleasure of the prose a second time as to clarify
something. To capture Ali's purpose with this book, and to quote
from one of my favorite paragraphs, here is the last sentence of
his Introduction: 'The goal here is to stretch that specter of
inquiry across the full spectrum of human learning about ordered
systems so as to make the quest for sustainability more meaningful
in both literal and figurative ways.' And, that's just what he
does, with elegance and great insight.
*Jared Cohon, President Emeritus Carnegie Mellon University, Member
of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering*
We are privileged to enjoy Saleem's wisdom in the UNEP
International Resource Panel. As he states "The ultimate aim (of
this book) is contemporary global problem-solving by understanding
basic tenets of functional order in natural, social, and political
systems. " This statement describes well the very ambition of this
essential work. Nothing less than the basics of our existence in
the quest leading to sustainability. How could one resist to read
it and learn?
*Janez Potočnik, European Commissioner for Environment (2010
-2014); European Commissioner for Science (2004-2010)*
In making his arguments Ali draws from the work of Nobel prize
winning scientists and his own deep knowledge of philosophy and
history. Anyone anxious about the future of the planet will benefit
from Ali's carefully considered, well-argued insights.
*Choice*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |