m (Ethan moved page EcoVillage Myth to Criticisms of ecovilages: This article could be reworked into a criticism section of ecovilages)
(No difference)

Revision as of 03:24, 8 April 2017

"There are no examples of fully realized ecovillages as of this writing." - Tony Sirna, 2000, What Is Ecovillage?

Ecovillages are a myth - faerie tales told to wide-eyed children at bedtime.

Q: What is an EcoVillage ?
A: An ecologically-minded village of people.
Q: So what is a village ?
A: Bigger than a hamlet, smaller than a town.
Q: Do what?
A: In England, a hamlet denotes a collection of houses, too small to have a parish church. A village has a church, but no market. A town has both a market and a church or churches.

Hmmm... Is that 100 people, 500 people ?

First of all, a market implies that the village members have some amount of surplus production. If there is no surplus, there is no market, and therefor no village. A market also implies that the villagers are exchanging a significant portion of their goods and services with each other. Since one hundred percent is impossible, what is significant ? Fifty percent ? Can one-hundred people produce/consume enough surplus to provide 50 percent of each others needs ?

At what standard of living ? Lower the standard of living sufficiently, and any number of people can be provided for. Perhaps it is possible in a third-world setting. Maybe that is why there are no eco-villages in the United States.

What do you think ?

See also

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