What the Universe Wants
A page from What the Universe Wants — the wreck nobody chose

The Tragedy of the Commons

or, how a dozen reasonable people empty a sea that none of them wanted emptied

Jump to the simulation: the shared sea

For five hundred years the cod off Newfoundland were less a fish than a fact, like weather or granite. The Grand Banks were so thick with them that John Cabot’s crew, the story goes, hauled them up in weighted baskets. Whole towns were built facing that water and pointed at that one animal — the boats, the wharves, the salt sheds, the church. The cod were the kind of abundance you stop seeing because it has always been there and always will be. And then, across about thirty years, the catch was scaled up with sonar and draggers and freezer trawlers that could take in a day what a dory once took in a season, and the spawning stock fell from something like a million and a half tonnes to roughly one percent of that. In July of 1992 the Canadian fisheries minister stood up and closed the fishery outright. Some thirty thousand people lost their work in a single announcement. The ban was meant to last two years so the cod could come back. It ran for decades, and the cod did not come back on anyone’s schedule.

Here is the part worth sitting with. No one in that story is a villain. Each skipper who bought a bigger boat was doing the sensible thing — for his family, his crew, his loan at the bank. The fish he left in the water would not wait for him; another boat would take them. So the rational move, the responsible-to-your-own move, was to catch them first. Every person made a defensible choice, and the choices summed to a catastrophe that not one of them wanted and not one of them ordered. That gap — between sane parts and an insane whole — is the thing this page is about.

This site spends most of its pages admiring emergence: order swimming up out of the river of entropy with no one in charge — flocks, forests, markets, minds. This is a page about the same machinery running the other way. The flock and the famine come off the same press. A pattern that recurs across systems with nothing in common is not thereby a good pattern, and this is the one the site keeps promising to show you with the gloves off: structure with no author, steering toward ruin, with every individual rowing hard and reasonably in exactly the wrong direction.


The name comes from a 1968 essay in Science by a biologist named Garrett Hardin, and the picture he drew was older and simpler than a fishery. Imagine a pasture open to the whole village — a commons — and a herdsman deciding whether to add one more animal to it. The gain from that animal is all his: he sells it, he keeps the money. The cost — a little more crop­ping of grass shared by every beast on the field — is spread across the whole village and barely touches him. So the arithmetic in his own ledger is lopsided and clear: add the animal. The trouble is that the same arithmetic is just as clear in every villager’s ledger, so everyone adds animals, and the grass that could have fed a sustainable herd forever is cropped to dirt in a few seasons. “Ruin is the destination toward which all men rush,” Hardin wrote, “each pursuing his own best interest.” Freedom in a commons, he said, brings ruin to all.

You can feel why it stuck. Once you have the shape, you see it everywhere a benefit is private and a cost is shared: a fishery, an aquifer pumped by a hundred farms, a grassland, a fast-emptying parking lot of a planet’s worth of atmosphere with everyone’s exhaust going into it. The structure does not care what the resource is. It is a design pattern, in the sense this whole site means the phrase — the same logic compiling itself onto sheep and cod and groundwater and air, because the same incentive sits underneath them all.

So before we talk about whether the trap is escapable — and it is, which is the real news — it is worth watching it close on its own. Below is a small shared sea and a fleet of boats. The sea grows its own fish back every year, the way a real stock does, fast when there is room and slowly when it is crowded. Each boat decides, on its own, how hard to fish. To start, there are no rules at all — no agreed limit anyone honors, no one watching, no penalty for taking more than your share. Press Begin, and watch the water.

The Experiment

Experiment — the shared sea
100%
how much the fleet agrees to take, as a share of what the sea can safely renew
0%
the chance a boat that overfishes is caught this year
40
how much a caught cheater loses — 0 is a wink, 120 is ruinous
year 0 fish in the sea 100% boats overfishing this year’s catch 0
Left, the sea — each pale dot is fish still in the water; the boats ring the shore. A boat fishing within the limit is calmgreen; a boat grabbing more than its share is brightred. Right, the stock plotted year by year: the dashed line is the level a healthy sea settles at when it’s fished sustainably, and the dark band along the bottom is collapse — once the curve sinks in there, there are too few fish left to breed back.

Things to try:

What the little sea is doing is not subtle, and that is the point. Nobody in it is greedy in any cartoon sense — each boat is running the same lopsided ledger Hardin’s herdsman ran. The gain from one more haul lands in one hull; the cost, a slightly emptier sea, is split across the whole fleet and across next year. So the move that is rational for the boat is ruinous for the water, and since every boat reasons the same way, the ruin is not a risk but a destination. You did not watch a morality play. You watched an attractor.


For a long time the story stopped there, and the two exits anyone drew were grim. Hardin’s own prescription was “mutual coercion, mutually agreed upon” — hand the commons to the state and let it ration the grass. The other classic answer was to carve the commons into private parcels, so that each owner bears the full cost of wrecking his own. Fence it or nationalize it: that was the menu. Both can work, and both throw away something. And both quietly assume the people in the commons are too trapped, or too dim, to talk their way out.

It took a political scientist named Elinor Ostrom to go and check. Where the theorists had a chalkboard, she had a field notebook, and she spent decades visiting actual commons that had not collapsed — some of them running for centuries. High in the Swiss Alps, the village of Törbel has shared its summer pasture since the 1400s under a rule of disarming simplicity: no villager may send more cows up to the common alp than he can feed through the winter on his own land. You cannot inflate your herd on the village’s grass, because the bottleneck is your own barn. Japanese mountain villages governed shared forests — the iriai — across centuries the same way. The lobstermen of Maine sorted their coast into harbor territories, policed by the fishermen themselves, and kept their catch alive while groundfish crashed up and down the same shore. These were not noble savages and they were not saints. They were ordinary people who had built, and kept repairing, a set of homemade rules.

Out of hundreds of these cases Ostrom pulled the pattern — the conditions that tend to be present when a commons survives, and absent when it dies. The list is longer than our three sliders, but our three are on it, and they are the heart of it: a real limit on the take, set by the people who live with the consequences; eyes that actually watch (often the users watching each other, which is cheaper and harder to corrupt than a distant inspector); and graduated penalties that start gentle and grow with repeat offenses, so that breaking the rule stops paying. Add clear boundaries about who is in, ways to settle disputes fast and fairly, and enough room from higher authorities to make and revise their own rules, and a commons can hold. In 2009 that work won her the Nobel in economics — the first woman to receive it — for showing, against a famous and tidy theory, that the tragedy is a tendency and not a sentence.

That is exactly what the simulation lets you feel from the inside. The crash is real and it is the default; leave people in an unmanaged commons and the attractor does its work. But the trap has a door, and the door is not magic — it is the unglamorous machinery of a limit, a watch, and a consequence, the same three you slid up until the boats went green. None of it requires the fishers to become better people. It requires them to change the payoffs, so that the move that is good for each stops being the move that is bad for all.


A note on the man whose phrase this is, because honesty is cheap and useful here. Garrett Hardin had the structure right and a good deal else wrong. His 1968 essay was really an argument for coercive population control, and his later writing ran toward an ugly nativism that the metaphor does not need and that many people who use it today would disown. It is a small case of the page’s own theme: an idea, like a pattern, is not endorsed by the fact that it recurs and persuades. The tragedy of the commons is a true and important shape. You can hold the shape and drop the man’s conclusions, and you should.

And that is the note the page wants to end on, because it is the spine of the whole site. The same emergence that builds the cathedral builds the trap. The universe permits an attractor in which every reasonable choice adds up to wreckage — it runs that program on sheep and cod and aquifers and the sky with the same blank competence it brings to a starling flock. What it does not do is bless it. There is no law of nature that says the commons must be lost; Törbel has kept its grass for six hundred years. Whether a given sea is emptied or kept is not written in the arithmetic. It is left, as ever on this site, to us — to whether we can see the shape early, while there are still fish in the water, and agree on the boring rules that turn a tragedy back into a commons. The frog on the bank does not get to vote on whether the pond fills. We do.

Sources & Further Reading