Baywood Publishing Company
0047-2433
1541-3802
Journal of Environmental Systems
BWES
300323
http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=journal&id=300323
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000004000419740101
Number 4 / 1974
M8B4G7V7URYF
http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=issue&id=M8B4G7V7URYF
10.2190/WC8R-BYTN-HXLY-F9MK
WC8RBYTNHXLYF9MK
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Ecological Systems Versus Human Systems: Which Should be Supreme?
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WC8RBYTNHXLYF9MK.pdf
http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=contribution&id=WC8RBYTNHXLYF9MK
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M.
A.
Santos
Queens College, Flushing, New York
A reasonable outcome of man's quest for knowledge of the earth's dynamic forces is to attempt to control the future development of our environment. This manuscript considers the managerial relationship between the ecological system and the human system. It specifically discusses the benefits and costs that is derived by the human system by being a part of a larger more complex unit. The proposal is made that man is not yet ready to take the helm of the planet earth and to guide its orderly and sequential development.
P. B. Weisz, The Science of Biology. McGraw Hill, 1971.
H. F. Birnbaum, Stare Decisis Vs. Judicial Activism: Nothing Succeeds Like Success. A. B. A. J. 54:482, 1968.
J. H. Eley, Jr., and J. Myers, Study of a Photosynthetic Gas Exchanger: A Quantitative Repetition of the Priestley Experiment. Texas J. Science 16: 296-333, 1964.