
“Nature shrinks as capital grows. The growth of the market cannot solve the very crisis it creates.”
Source: Soil Not Oil: Environmental Justice in an Age of Climate Crisis
As quoted in “Charles Coughlin, 30's ‘Radio Priest,’” Albin Krebsoct, New York Times, Oct. 28, 1979. https://www.nytimes.com/1979/10/28/archives/charles-coughlin-30s-radio-priest-dies-fiery-sermons-stirred-furor.html
“Nature shrinks as capital grows. The growth of the market cannot solve the very crisis it creates.”
Source: Soil Not Oil: Environmental Justice in an Age of Climate Crisis
Source: The Friends of Voltaire (1906), Ch. 7 : Helvétius : The Contradiction, p. 188
Source: Another World Is Possible : Globalization and Anti-capitalism (2002), Chapter 3, The Invisible Hand Is A Closed Fist, p. 69
Commentarius in VIII Libros Physicorum Aristoteles (c. 1230-1235)
Source: Testimony: its Posture in the Scientific World (1859), p. 9
“Conservatism is alien to the very nature of capitalism.”
Source: Odyssey of a Friend (1969), p. 229
"What is Wrong with the 'Official History of Capitalism'?", in Edward Fullbrook (ed.), A Guide to What's Wrong with Economics (2004), p. 280
Preface
1920s, Science and the Modern World (1925)
Context: Philosophy, in one of its functions, is the critic of cosmologies. It is its function to harmonise, refashion, and justify divergent intuitions as to the nature of things. It has to insist on the scrutiny of the ultimate ideas, and on the retention of the whole of the evidence in shaping our cosmological scheme. Its business is to render explicit, and — so far as may be — efficient, a process which otherwise is unconsciously performed without rational tests.
In a speech on Democratic Development, Pluralism and Civil Society delivered at the Nobel Institute, Oslo, Norway (7 April 2005). http://www.akdn.org/speech/nobel-institute-oslo