Garrett James Hardin (April 21, 1915 – September 14, 2003) was a leading and controversial ecologist from Dallas, Texas, who was most known for his 1968 paper, The Tragedy of the Commons. He is also known for Hardin's First Law of Ecology, which states "You cannot do only one thing", and used the ubiquitous phrase "Nice guys finish last" to sum up the "selfish gene" concept of life and evolution.[1]
Hardin and his wife Jane were both members of the Hemlock Society (now Compassion & Choices), and believed in individuals choosing their own time to die. They committed suicide in their Santa Barbara home in September 2003, shortly after their 62nd wedding anniversary. He was 88 and she was 81.[3]
Hardin's last book The Ostrich Factor: Our Population Myopia (1999), a warning about the threat of overpopulation to the Earth's sustainable economic future, called for coercive constraints on "unqualified reproductive rights" and argued that affirmative action is a form of racism.
1976. Living with Faustian Bargain. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists32, 25-29.
1980. Ecology and the death of Providence. Zygon15, 57-68.
1982. Discriminating altruisms. Zygon17, 163-186.
1983. Is violence natural? Zygon18, 405-413.
1985. Human-ecology - the subversive, conservative science. American Zoologist25, 469-476.
1986. Cultural carrying-capacity - a biological approach to human problems. Bioscience36, 599-606.
1994. The Tragedy of the Unmanaged Commons. Trends in Ecology & Evolution9, 199.
1998. Extensions of "The Tragedy of the Commons". Science280, 682-683.
Chapters in books
1991. Paramount positions in ecological economics. In Costanza, R. (editor) Ecological Economics: The Science and Management of Sustainability, New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231075626
1991. In: R. V. Andelson, (editor), Commons Without Tragedy, London : Shepheard-Walwyn , pp. 162–185. ISBN 0389209589 (U.S.)