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Authors: Matt Ridley

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p. 341 ‘a rash of empirical studies showing that increased carbonic acid either has no effect or actually increases the growth of calcareous plankton’. Iglesias-Rodriguez, M.D. et al. 2008. Phytoplankton calcification in a high-CO
2
world.
Science
320:336–40. Other studies of the carbonate issue are summarised by Idso, C. 2009.
CO
2
, Global Warming and Coral Reefs
. Vales Lake Publishing.
p. 341 ‘said Bill Clinton once’. Speech to the US National Academy of Sciences, 15 July 1998.
p. 341 ‘As Indur Goklany puts it’. Goklany, I. 2008.
The Improving State of the World
. Cato Institute.
p. 341 ‘The results of thirteen economic analyses of climate change’. Summarised in Tol, R. S. J. 2009. The Economic Effects of Climate Change.
Journal of Economic Perspectives
, 23:29–51. http://www.aeaweb.org/articles.php? doi=10.1257/jep.23.2.29. See also the essay by Jerry Taylor at http://www.masterresource.org/2009/11/the-economics-of-climate-change-essential-knowledge.
p. 342 ‘quoting from the IPCC’s 2007 report’. IPCC AR4, Working Group III, p. 204.
p. 342 ‘says the physicist David MacKay’. MacKay, D. 2009.
Sustainable Energy – without the Hot Air
. UIT, Cambridge.
p. 343 ‘125 kilowatt-hours per day per person of work that give Britons their standard of living’. Numbers in this paragraph recalculated from MacKay, D. 2009.
Sustainable Energy – without the Hot Air
. UIT, Cambridge. Compare this number (125 kWh per person per day) with the number given in chapter 7 from a different source: England consumes 250 gigawatts (250 gigajoules per second) in total, or 5,000 joules per person per second, assuming the population of England is 50m. There are 3.6m joules in a kilowatt hour and 86,400 seconds in a day so 5,000 x 86,400 = 432m joules per person per day. 432/3.6 = 120 kWh per person per day.
p. 344 ‘a Spanish study confirms that wind power subsidies destroy jobs’. Donald Hertzmark, 6 April 2009 at http://masterresource.org/?p=1625. See also http://www.juandemariana.org/pdf/090327-employment-public-aid-renewable.pdf, and http://masterresource.org/?p=5046#more-5046.
p. 344 ‘writes Peter Huber’. Huber, P. 2009. Bound to burn.
City Journal
, spring 2009.
p. 344 ‘quite soon engineers will be able to use sunlight to make hydrogen directly from water with ruthenium dye as a catalyst’. Bullis, K. 2008. Sun + water = fuel.
Technology Review
, November/December, 56–61.
pp. 344–5 ‘Once solar panels can be mass-produced at $200 per square metre and with an efficiency of 12 per cent, they could generate the equivalent of a barrel of oil for about $30’. Ian Pearson, 8.9.08: http://www.futurizon.net/blog.htm.
p. 345 ‘human energy use over the past 150 years as it migrated from wood to coal to oil to gas’. Ausubel, J.H. 2003. ‘Decarbonisation: the Next 100 Years’. Lecture at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, June 2003. http://phe.rockefeller.edu/PDF_FILES/oakridge.pdf.
p. 346 ‘Jesse Ausubel predicts’. Ausubel, J.H. and Waggoner, P.E. 2008. Dematerialization: variety, caution and persistence.
PNAS
105:12774–9. See also: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/science/earth/21tier.html.
p. 346 ‘carbon-rich oceanic organisms called salps’. Lebrato, M. and Jones, D.O.B. 2009. Mass deposition event of Pyrosoma atlanticum carcasses off Ivory Coast (West Africa).
Limnology and Oceanography
54:1197–1209.

Chapter 11

p. 349 IPCC projections for world GDP graph. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 4th Assessment Report 2007.
p. 352 ‘said H.G. Wells’. Wells, H.G. ‘The Discovery of the Future’ Lecture at the Royal Institution, 24 January 1902, published in
Nature
65:326–31. Reproduced with the permission of AP Watt Ltd on behalf of the Literary Executors of the Estate of H.G. Wells.
p. 354 ‘As Paul Romer puts it’. Quotes are from Romer, P. ‘Economic growth’ in the
Concise Encyclopedia of Economics (edited by David R Henderson, published by Liberty Fund)
; and Romer, P. 1994. New goods, old theory, and the welfare costs of trade restrictions.
Journal of Development Economics
43:5–38.
p. 355 ‘the world economy will be doubling in months or even weeks’. Hanson, R. 2008. Economics of the Singularity.
IEEE Spectrum
(June 2008) 45:45–50.
p. 355 ‘a technological “singularity”’. This notion has been explored by Vernor Vinge and Ray Kurzweil. See Kurzweil, R. 2005.
The Singularity Is Near
. Penguin.
p. 355 ‘says Stephen Levy.’ Levy, S. 2009. Googlenomics.
Wired
, June 2009.
p. 356 ‘says the author Clay Shirky’. Shirky, C. 2008.
Here Comes Everybody
. Penguin.
p. 356 ‘Says Kevin Kelly’. Kelly, K. 2009. The new socialism.
Wired
, June 2009.
p. 358 ‘The wrong kind of chiefs, priests and thieves could yet snuff out future prosperity on earth.’ Meir Kohn has written eloquently on this point. See www.dartmouth.edu/~mkohn/Papers/lessons% 201r3.pdf.
p. 359 ‘Said Lord Macaulay’. Macaulay, T.B. 1830. Southey’s Colloquies on Society.
Edinburgh Review
, January 1830.
p. 359 ‘In Thornton Wilder’s play
The Skin of Our Teeth
’. Wilder, T. 1943.
The Skin of Our Teeth
. HarperCollins.
Index

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.

  • Abbasids 161, 178
  • Abelard, Peter 358
  • aborigines (Australian): division of labour 62, 63, 76; farming 127; technological regress 78–84; trade 90–91, 92
  • abortion, compulsory 203
  • Abu Hureyra 127
  • Acapulco 184
  • accounting systems 160, 168, 196
  • Accra 189
  • Acemoglu, Daron 321
  • Ache people 61
  • Acheulean tools 48–9, 50, 275, 373
  • Achuar people 87
  • acid rain 280, 281, 304–6, 329, 339
  • acidification of oceans 280, 340–41
  • Adams, Henry 289
  • Aden 177
  • Adenauer, Konrad 289
  • Aegean sea 168, 170–71
  • Afghanistan 14, 208–9, 315, 353
  • Africa: agriculture 145, 148, 154–5, 326; AIDS epidemic 14, 307–8, 316, 319, 320, 322; colonialism 319–20, 321–2; demographic transition 210, 316, 328; economic growth 315, 326–8, 332, 347; international aid 317–19, 322, 328; lawlessness 293, 320; life expectancy 14, 316, 422; per capita income 14, 315, 317, 320; poverty 314–17, 319–20, 322, 325–6, 327–8; prehistoric 52–5, 65–6, 83, 123, 350; property rights 320, 321, 323–5; trade 187–8, 320, 322–3, 325, 326, 327–8;
    see also individual countries
  • African-Americans 108
  • agricultural employment: decline in 42–3; hardships of 13, 219–20, 285–6
  • agriculture: early development of 122–30, 135–9, 352, 387, 388; fertilisers, development of 135, 139–41, 142, 146, 147, 337; genetically modified (GM) crops 28, 32, 148, 151–6, 283, 358; hybrids, development of 141–2, 146, 153; and trade 123, 126, 127–33, 159, 163–4; and urbanisation 128, 158–9, 163–4, 215;
    see also
    farming; food supply
  • Agta people 61–2
  • aid, international 28, 141, 154, 203, 317–19, 328
  • AIDS 8, 14, 307–8, 310, 316, 319, 320, 322, 331, 353
  • AIG (insurance corporation) 115
  • air conditioning 17
  • air pollution 304–5
  • air travel: costs of 24, 37, 252, 253; speed of 253
  • aircraft 257, 261, 264, 266
  • Akkadian empire 161, 164–5
  • Al-Ghazali 357
  • Al-Khwarizmi, Muhammad ibn Musa 115
  • Al-Qaeda 296
  • Albania 187
  • Alcoa (corporation) 24
  • Alexander the Great 169, 171
  • Alexander, Gary 295
  • Alexandria 171, 175, 270
  • Algeria 53, 246, 345
  • alphabet, invention of 166, 396
  • Alps 122, 178
  • altruism 93–4, 97
  • aluminium 24, 213, 237, 303
  • Alyawarre aborigines 63
  • Amalfi 178
  • Amazon (corporation) 21, 259, 261
  • Amazonia 76, 138, 145, 250–51
  • amber 71, 92
  • ambition 45–6, 351
  • Ames, Bruce 298–9
  • Amish people 211
  • ammonia 140, 146
  • Amsterdam 115–16, 169, 259, 368
  • Amsterdam Exchange Bank 251
  • Anabaptists 211
  • Anatolia 127, 128, 164, 165, 166, 167
  • Ancoats, Manchester 214
  • Andaman islands 66–7, 78
  • Andes 123, 140, 163
  • Andrew, Deroi Kwesi 189
  • Angkor Wat 330
  • Angola 316
  • animal welfare 104, 145–6
  • animals: conservation 324, 339; extinctions 17, 43, 64, 68, 69–70, 243, 293, 302, 338–9; humans’ differences from other 1, 2–4, 6, 56, 58, 64
  • Annan, Kofi 337
  • Antarctica 334
  • anti-corporatism 110–111, 114
  • anti-slavery 104, 105–6, 214
  • antibiotics 6, 258, 271, 307
  • antimony 213
  • ants 75–6, 87–8, 192
  • apartheid 108
  • apes 56–7, 59–60, 62, 65, 88;
    see also
    chimpanzees; orang-utans
  • ‘apocaholics’ 295, 301
  • Appalachia 239
  • Apple (corporation) 260, 261, 268
  • Aquinas, St Thomas 102
  • Arabia 66, 159, 176, 179
  • Arabian Sea 174
  • Arabs 89, 175, 176–7, 180, 209, 357
  • Aral Sea 240
  • Arcadia Biosciences (company) 31–2
  • Archimedes 256
  • Arctic Ocean 125, 130, 185, 334, 338–9
  • Argentina 15, 186, 187
  • Arikamedu 174
  • Aristotle 115, 250
  • Arizona 152, 246, 345
  • Arkwright, Sir Richard 227
  • Armenians 89
  • Arnolfini, Giovanni 179
  • art: cave paintings 2, 68, 73, 76–7; and commerce 115–16; symbolism in 136; as unique human trait 4
  • Ashur, Assyria 165
  • Asimov, Isaac 354
  • Asoka the Great 172–3
  • aspirin 258
  • asset price inflation 24, 30
  • Assyrian empire 161, 165–6, 167
  • asteroid impacts, risk of 280, 333
  • astronomy 221, 270, 357
  • Athabasca tar sands, Canada 238
  • Athens 115, 170, 171
  • Atlantic Monthly
    293
  • Atlantic Ocean 125, 170
  • Attica 171
  • Augustus, Roman emperor 174
  • Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony 184–5
  • Australia: climate 127, 241, 300, 334; prehistoric 66, 67, 69–70, 127; trade 187;
    see also
    aborigines (Australian); Tasmania
  • Austria 132
  • Ausubel, Jesse 239, 346, 409
  • automobiles
    see
    cars axes: copper 123, 131, 132, 136, 271; stone 2, 5, 48–9, 50, 51, 71, 81, 90–91, 92, 118–19, 271

 

  • Babylon 21, 161, 166, 240, 254, 289
  • Bacon, Francis 255
  • bacteria: cross fertilisation 271; and pest control 151; resistance to antibiotics 6, 258, 271, 307; symbiosis 75
  • Baghdad 115, 177, 178, 357
  • Baines, Edward 227
  • Baird, John Logie 38
  • baking 124, 130
  • ‘balance of nature’, belief in 250–51
  • Balazs, Etienne 183
  • bald eagles 17, 299
  • Bali 66
  • Baltic Sea 71, 128–9, 180, 185
  • Bamako 326
  • bananas 92, 126, 149, 154, 392
  • Bangladesh 204, 210, 426
  • Banks, Sir Joseph 221
  • Barigaza (Bharuch) 174
  • barley 32, 124, 151
  • barrels 176
  • bartering vii, 56–60, 65, 84, 91–2, 163, 356
  • Basalla, George 272
  • Basra 177
  • battery farming 104, 145–6
  • BBC 295
  • beads 53, 70, 71, 73, 81, 93, 162
  • beef 186, 224, 308;
    see also
    cattle bees, killer 280
  • Beijing 17
  • Beinhocker, Eric 112
  • Bell, Alexander Graham 38
  • Bengal famine (1943) 141
  • benzene 257
  • Berlin 299
  • Berlin, Sir Isaiah 288
  • Bernard of Clairvaux, St 358
  • Berners-Lee, Sir Tim 38, 273
  • Berra, Yogi 354
  • Besant, Annie 208
  • Bhutan 25–6
  • Bible 138, 168, 396
  • bicycles 248–9, 263, 269–70
  • bin Laden, Osama 110
  • biofuels 149, 236, 238, 239, 240–43, 246, 300, 339, 343, 344, 346, 393
  • Bird, Isabella 197–8
  • birds: effects of pollution on 17, 299; killed by wind turbines 239, 409; nests 51; sexual differences 64; songbirds 55;
    see also individual species
  • bireme galleys 167
  • Birmingham 223
  • birth control
    see
    contraception
  • birth rates: declining 204–212; and food supply 192, 208–9; and industrialisation 202; measurement of 205, 403; population control policies 202–4, 208; pre-industrial societies 135, 137; and television 234; and wealth 200–201, 204, 205–6, 209, 211, 212;
    see also
    population growth
  • Black Death 181, 195–6, 197, 380
  • Black Sea 71, 128, 129, 170, 176, 180
  • blogging 257
  • Blombos Cave, South Africa 53, 83
  • blood circulation, discovery of 258
  • Blunt, John 29
  • boat-building 167, 168, 177;
    see also
    canoes; ship-building
  • Boers 321, 322
  • Bohemia 222
  • Bolivia 315, 324
  • Bolsheviks 324
  • Borlaug, Norman 142–3, 146
  • Borneo 339
  • Bosch, Carl 140, 412
  • Botswana 15, 316, 320–22, 326
  • Bottger, Johann Friedrich 184–5
  • Boudreaux, Don 21, 214
  • Boulton, Matthew 221, 256, 413–14
  • bows and arrows 43, 62, 70, 82, 137, 251, 274
  • Boxgrove hominids 48, 50
  • Boyer, Stanley 222, 405
  • Boyle, Robert 256
  • Bradlaugh, Charles 208
  • brain size 3–4, 48–9, 51, 55
  • Bramah, Joseph 221
  • Branc, Slovakia 136
  • Brand, Stewart 154, 189, 205
  • Brando, Marlon 110
  • brass 223
  • Brazil 38, 87, 123, 190, 240, 242, 315, 358
  • bread 38, 124, 140, 158, 224, 286, 392
  • bridges, suspension 283
  • Brin, Sergey 221, 405
  • Britain: affluence 12, 16, 224–5, 236, 296–7; birth rates 195, 200–201, 206, 208, 227; British exceptionalism 200–202, 221–2; climate change policy 330–31; consumer prices 24, 224–5, 227, 228; copyright system 267; enclosure acts 226, 323, 406; energy use 22, 231–2, 232–3, 342–3, 368, 430; ‘glorious revolution’ (1688) 223; income equality 18–19, 218; industrial revolution 201–2, 216–17, 220–32, 255–6, 258–9; life expectancy 15, 17–18; National Food Service 268; National Health Service 111, 261; parliamentary reform 107; per capita income 16, 218, 227, 285, 404–5; productivity 112; property rights 223, 226, 323–4; state benefits 16; tariffs 185–6, 186–7, 223;
    see also
    England; Scotland; Wales
  • British Empire 161, 322
  • bronze 164, 168, 177
  • Brosnan, Sarah 59
  • Brown, Lester 147–8, 281–2, 300–301
  • Brown, Louise 306
  • Bruges 179
  • Brunel, Sir Marc 221
  • Buddhism 2, 172, 357
  • Buddle, John 412
  • Buffett, Warren 106, 268
  • Bulgaria 320
  • Burkina Faso 154
  • Burma 66, 67, 209, 335
  • Bush, George W. 161
  • Butler, Eamonn 105, 249
  • Byblos 167
  • Byzantium 176, 177, 179

 

  • cabbages 298
  • ‘Caesarism’ 289
  • Cairo 323
  • Calcutta 190, 315
  • Calico Act (1722) 226
  • Califano, Joseph 202–3
  • California: agriculture 150; Chumash people 62, 92–3; development of credit card 251, 254; Mojave Desert 69; Silicon Valley 221–2, 224, 257, 258, 259, 268
  • Cambodia 14, 315
  • camels 135, 176–7
  • camera pills 270–71
  • Cameroon 57
  • Campania 174, 175
  • Canaanites 166, 396
  • Canada 141, 169, 202, 238, 304, 305
  • Canal du Midi 251
  • cancer 14, 18, 293, 297–9, 302, 308, 329
  • Cannae, battle of 170
  • canning 186, 258
  • canoes 66, 67, 79, 82
  • capitalism 23–4, 101–4, 110, 115, 133, 214, 258–62, 291–2, 311;
    see also
    corporations; markets
  • ‘Captain Swing’ 283
  • capuchin monkeys 96–7, 375
  • Caral, Peru 162–3
  • carbon dioxide emissions 340–47; absorption of 217; and agriculture 130, 337–8; and biofuels 242; costs of 331; and economic growth 315, 332; and fossil fuels 237, 315; and local sourcing of goods 41–2; taxes 346, 356
  • Cardwell’s Law 411
  • Caribbean
    see
    West Indies
  • Carnegie, Andrew 23
  • Carney, Thomas 173
  • carnivorism 51, 60, 62, 68–9, 147, 156, 241, 376
  • carrots 153, 156
  • cars: biofuel for 240, 241; costs of 24, 252; efficiency of 252; future production 282, 355; hybrid 245; invention of 189, 270, 271; pollution from 17, 242; sport-utility vehicles 45
  • The Rational Optimist 424
  • Carson, Rachel 152, 297–8
  • Carter, Jimmy 238
  • Carthage 169, 170, 173
  • Cartwright, Edmund 221, 263
  • Castro, Fidel 187
  • Catalhoyuk 127
  • catallaxy 56, 355–9
  • Catholicism 105, 208, 306
  • cattle 122, 132, 145, 147, 148, 150, 197, 321, 336;
    see also
    beef
  • Caucasus 237
  • cave paintings 2, 68, 73, 76–7
  • Cavendish, Henry 221
  • cement 283
  • central heating 16, 37
  • cereals 124–5, 125–6, 130–31, 143–4, 146–7, 158, 163; global harvests 121
  • Champlain, Samuel 138–9
  • charcoal 131, 216, 229, 230, 346
  • charitable giving 92, 105, 106, 295, 318–19, 356
  • Charles V: king of Spain 30–31; Holy Roman Emperor 184
  • Charles, Prince of Wales 291, 332
  • Chauvet Cave, France 2, 68, 73, 76–7
  • Chernobyl 283, 308, 345, 421
  • Chicago World Fair (1893) 346
  • chickens 122–3, 145–6, 147, 148, 408
  • chickpeas 125
  • Childe, Gordon 162
  • children: child labour 104, 188, 218, 220, 292; child molestation 104; childcare 2, 62–3; childhood diseases 310; mortality rates 14, 15, 16, 208–9, 284
  • Chile 187
  • chimpanzees 2, 3, 4, 6, 29, 59–60, 87, 88, 97
  • China: agriculture 123, 126, 148, 152, 220; birth rate 15, 200–201; coal supplies 229–30; Cultural Revolution 14, 201; diet 241; economic growth and industrialisation 17, 109, 180–81, 187, 201, 219, 220, 281–2, 300, 322, 324–5, 328, 358; economic and technological regression 180, 181–2, 193, 229–30, 255, 321, 357–8; energy use 245; income equality 19; innovations 181, 251; life expectancy 15; Longshan culture 397; Maoism 16, 187, 296, 311; Ming empire 117, 181–4, 260, 311; per capita income 15, 180; prehistoric 68, 123, 126; serfdom 181–2; Shang dynasty 166; Song dynasty 180–81; trade 172, 174–5, 177, 179, 183–4, 187, 225, 228
  • chlorine 296
  • cholera 40, 310
  • Chomsky, Noam 291
  • Christianity 172, 357, 358, 396;
    see also
    Catholicism; Church of England; monasteries
  • Christmas 134
  • Chumash people 62, 92–3
  • Church of England 194
  • Churchill, Sir Winston 288
  • Cicero 173
  • Cilicia 173
  • Cisco Systems (corporation) 268
  • Cistercians 215
  • civil rights movement 108, 109
  • Clairvaux Abbey 215
  • Clark, Colin 146, 227
  • Clark, Gregory 193, 201, 401, 404
  • Clarke, Arthur C. 354
  • climate change 328–47, 426–30; costs of mitigation measures 330–32, 333, 338, 342–4; death rates associated with 335–7; and ecological dynamism 250, 329–30, 335, 339; and economic growth 315, 331–3, 341–3, 347; effects on ecosystems 338–41; and food supply 337–8; and fossil fuels 243, 314, 342, 346, 426; historic 194, 195, 329, 334, 426–7; pessimism about 280, 281, 314–15, 328–9; prehistoric 54, 65, 125, 127, 130, 160, 329, 334, 339, 340, 352; scepticism about 111, 329–30, 426; solutions to 8, 315, 345–7
  • Clinton, Bill 341
  • Clippinger, John 99
  • cloth trade 75, 159, 160, 165, 172, 177, 180, 194, 196, 225, 225–9, 232
  • clothes: Britain 224, 225, 227; early
    homo sapiens
    71, 73; Inuits 64; metal age 122; Tasmanian natives 78
  • clothing prices 20, 34, 37, 40, 227, 228
  • ‘Club of Rome’ 302–3
  • coal: and economic take-off 201, 202, 213, 214, 216–17; and generation of electricity 233, 237, 239, 240, 304, 344; and industrialisation 229–33, 236, 407; prices 230, 232, 237; supplies 302–3
  • coal mining 132, 230–31, 237, 239, 257, 343
  • Coalbrookdale 407
  • Cobb, Kelly 35
  • Coca-Cola (corporation) 111, 263
  • coffee 298–9, 392
  • Cohen, Mark 135
  • Cold War 299
  • collective intelligence 5, 38–9, 46, 56, 83, 350–52, 355–6
  • Collier, Paul 315, 316–17
  • colonialism 160, 161, 187, 321–2;
    see also
    imperialism
  • Colorado 324
  • Columbus, Christopher 91, 184
  • combine harvesters 158, 392
  • combined-cycle turbines 244, 410
  • commerce
    see
    trade
  • Commoner, Barry 402
  • communism 106, 336
  • Compaq (corporation) 259
  • computer games 273, 292
  • computers 2, 3, 5, 211, 252, 260, 261, 263–4, 268, 282; computing power costs 24; information storage capacities 276; silicon chips 245, 263, 267–8; software 99, 257, 272–3, 304, 356; Y2K bug 280, 290, 341;
    see also
    internet
  • Confucius 2, 181
  • Congo 14–15, 28, 307, 316
  • Congreve, Sir William 221
  • Connelly, Matthew 204
  • conservation, nature 324, 339;
    see also
    wilderness land, expansion of conservatism 109
  • Constantinople 175, 177
  • consumer spending, average 39–40
  • containerisation 113, 253, 386
  • continental drift 274
  • contraception 208, 210; coerced 203–4
  • Cook, Captain James 91
  • cooking 4, 29, 38, 50, 51, 52, 55, 60–61, 64, 163, 337
  • copper 122, 123, 131–2, 160, 162, 164, 165, 168, 213, 223, 302, 303
  • copyright 264, 266–7, 326
  • coral reefs 250, 339–40, 429–30
  • Cordoba 177
  • corn laws 185–6
  • Cornwall 132
  • corporations 110–116, 355; research and development budgets 260, 262, 269
  • Cosmides, Leda 57
  • Costa Rica 338
  • cotton 37, 108, 149, 151–2, 162, 163, 171, 172, 202, 225–9, 230, 407; calico 225–6, 232; spinning and weaving 184, 214, 217, 219–20, 227–8, 232, 256, 258, 263, 283
  • Coughlin, Father Charles 109
  • Craigslist (website) 273, 356
  • Crapper, Thomas 38
  • Crathis river 171
  • creationists 358
  • creative destruction 114, 356
  • credit cards 251, 254
  • credit crunch (2008) 8–10, 28–9, 31, 100, 102, 316, 355, 399, 411
  • Cree Indians 62
  • Crete 167, 169
  • Crichton, Michael 254
  • Crick, Francis 412
  • crime: cyber-crime 99–100, 357; falling rates 106, 201; false convictions 19–20; homicide 14, 20, 85, 88, 106, 118, 201; illegal drugs 106, 186; pessimism about 288, 293
  • Crimea 171
  • crocodiles, deaths by 40
  • Crompton, Samuel 227
  • Crookes, Sir William 140, 141
  • cruelty 104, 106, 138–9, 146
  • crusades 358
  • Cuba 187, 299
  • ‘curse of resources’ 31, 320
  • cyber-crime 99–100, 357
  • Cyprus 132, 148, 167, 168
  • Cyrus the Great 169

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