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Word: worlds (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...agricultural greenhouses. One company's waste becomes another's resource. The power plant, for example, sells the sulfur dioxide it scrubs from its smokestacks to the wallboard company, which uses the compound as a raw material. Dozens of these eco-industrial parks are being developed all over the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can We Make Garbage Disappear? | 11/8/1999 | See Source »

Ivan Amato, a free-lance magazine and radio reporter, is the author of Stuff: The Materials the World Is Made...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can We Make Garbage Disappear? | 11/8/1999 | See Source »

...gave the "dismal science" its nickname. His "Essay on the Principle of Population," published in 1798, predicted a gloomy future for humanity: our population would grow until it reached the limits of our food supply, ensuring that poverty and famine would persistently rear their ugly faces to the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Malthus Be Right? | 11/8/1999 | See Source »

...most casual cruise on the Internet shows how much debate Malthus still stirs today. Basically, the Pollyannas of this world say that Malthus was wrong; the population has continued to grow, economies remain robust--and famines in Biafra and Ethiopia are more aberrations than signs of the future. Cassandras reply that Malthus was right, but techno-fixes have postponed the day of reckoning. There are now 6 billion people on Earth. The Pollyannas say the more the merrier; the Cassandras say that is already twice as many as can be supported in middle-class comfort, and the world is running...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Malthus Be Right? | 11/8/1999 | See Source »

What's missing from the debate is an understanding of the changing relationship between humanity and nature. For it is how humans fit into the natural world that will settle whether Malthus was right or wrong. He was wrong in 1798. But if he had been writing 10,000 years earlier, before agriculture, he would have been right. And were his book being published today, on the brink of the third millennium, he would be more right than wrong. Let me explain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Malthus Be Right? | 11/8/1999 | See Source »

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