Here we get to the nub of it. I have a feeling I am maybe not being nearly dismissive enough!emordnilap wrote:
Such articles get swamped by the economically-focussed chapters (though producing nutritionally complete food makes economic sense).
No book - including Fleeing Vesuvius - is going to solve that much but it's part of the type of thinking that's required.
I am yet to be convinced that economists and their physical reality denying religion and arrogant theories, having led us to the current predicament, have suddenly changed their spots and are now coming up with outside the box ideas that are going to save the day and lead us all to some promised land ( usually called a soft landing).
We do have a massive systemic predicament and not merely some tractable problems amenable to being "solved" with even more exceedingly cunning plan(s).
So I would ask you what it is you see as what is solvable and what exactly is the "type of thinking that's required".
Let us indeed try and look outside the famous box.