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Executive Summary
We live in an age where wealth expands even as life foundations erode. Stock markets rise while hospitals struggle. Luxury condos stand empty while homelessness grows. Fossil fuel companies profit while the climate destabilizes. These contradictions reveal a profound disorder of values: global systems prioritize money growth, not life.
Canadian philosopher John McMurtry offers both diagnosis and cure. His Primary Axiom of Life Value provides a universal test: something is good if it enables more life capacity — thinking, feeling, acting — and bad if it diminishes them. From this follows the principle of rationing to life necessities: ensuring universal provision of what no human being can live without — clean air, safe water, food, healthcare, education, shelter, and ecological stability — before resources are consumed by luxury or waste.
This document explains McMurtry’s framework in accessible terms, showing:
- Foundations: Why values matter, the axiom of life value, and the distinction between needs and desires.
- Diagnosis: How the global economy functions like a cancer, consuming its host, and why dismantling public institutions (the civil commons) leaves societies vulnerable.
- Applications: How rationing to necessities reorients healthcare, education, economy, governance, and ecology toward life-coherence.
- Future Vision: How governance, science, and even freedom itself must be reclaimed through a life-first compass.
- Conclusion: Civilization faces a choice-space: continue with money-first values, risking collapse, or re-ground society in life-first values, securing a sustainable and meaningful future.
The central message is clear: rationing to necessities is not a restriction, but the liberation of life from systemic disorder. It is the only path to justice, sustainability, and genuine freedom in an age of crisis.










