Recognizing Known Unknowns Helps us to Adapt to Climate Change

From a post by Matthew E. Kahn:

“I like Peter Coy’s new New York Times column and want to use it to discuss the climate change adaptation challenge.

Here is a direct quote from Coy;

“Knight’s thinking is as relevant now as it was in 1921, when “Risk, Uncertainty and Profit” was published. We still need tools for coping with uncertainty. Knight’s perspective can guide us to a middle course between trying to avoid uncertainty entirely, which is impossible, and plunging headlong into the darkness, which is reckless.

Knight has been forgotten or misconstrued repeatedly over the past century. A new book by the scholar Amar Bhidé brings back his original insights and dares to try to improve upon them — mostly by extending them into realms that Knight didn’t consider, such as the persuasive techniques that entrepreneurs use to overcome the uncertainty felt by investors, customers and partners.”

Peter Coy has not interviewed me about my work on Knightian Uncertainty applied to climate change adaptation. In my academic writing and in my 2021 book Adapting to Climate Change,

Continue reading here.

Posted by at 2:02 PM

Labels: Energy & Climate Change

Home

Subscribe to: Posts