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Should we care about the human future? If so, how much?

In virtually every institution in human society, we humans concern ourselves with the continuation of the species. We have children, we raise them in some sort of family, we educate them for the world of work and citizenship, and then we see them couple and start the cycle all over again. All the while we seek to defend ourselves from disease, violence, economic deprivation, in fact, anything that might cut short our lives or those of our children. It ought to be self-evident that human beings do care about the future. What I want to examine is whether they should and if so, how much.

For this I will need to take you through some simple thought experiments which will test just how much you might do for the sake of human continuity and just how far into the future you might project your own responsibility.

It is a truism that parents concern themselves with the well-being and happiness of their children and grandchildren (and great grandchildren if they live that long). So, a concern about the general state of human society will extend two or perhaps three generations into the future or roughly 50 to 75 years. After that, it’s hard for us to put a lot of emotion into making things right for people we will never know.

But let’s say you have an altruistic streak that transcends time. You actually believe that people you will never meet deserve your consideration now. You believe that you should leave them a society that makes a good life possible, however you conceive of that good life. How far into the future will this concern carry? 100 years? 1,000 years? 10,000 years? I sense your commitment fading the further out in time I go. After all, how can any of us possibly foresee what human life will be like in 10,000 years (assuming humans survive that long)? How can we even conceive of what a good life will look like then?

Now, let me throw a little cold water on your warm-blooded altruism. Let’s say that today we as a global society decided to do everything we need to do to create what is roughly speaking a sustainable society. This would include ending our reliance on fossil fuels, adopting organic farming techniques, letting go of consumerism as an organizing principle, harvesting renewable resources only at the rate they can be renewed, gradually but drastically reducing population over time until it is below the Earth’s carrying capacity for humans, and creating a cradle-to-cradle resource management system for all finite resources. Certainly, this list could be expanded. But the point is that the system we create could, in theory, be bequeathed to humans for as long as there is a planet Earth.

Now, what if at some point, say, 500 years into this grand experiment, a society arises that decides all these rules on what we can and cannot do should be repealed, especially the restriction on burning fossil fuels? So, today we make great sacrifices to move from a doomed society to one that is sustainable out of concern and respect for future generations. Then, some future generation blows it by undoing everything we’ve done. How’s that for slap in the face? Except, of course, you won’t be around to actually feel the slap. Still, this thought experiment forces us to confront a very ugly possibility and question how much we should sacrifice now for a potentially ungrateful and lethal generation in the future.

Now, let’s go even further into the future. Let’s say humans remain responsibly sustainable indefinitely. How long will that be? Well, the fossil record suggests that mammalian species such as humans have an average lifespan of 2 million years. So, if we date humans using the classification Homo sapiens, then we are a young species, perhaps 200,000 years old. If we date humans back to the beginning of the entire genus of hominids at least 4 million years ago, then humans are essentially in evolutionary overtime.

But no matter what time line you use, one thing remains true: The chances that we humans will defy the logic of the fossil record seem slim. Some 99 percent of all species that have ever existed on Earth have disappeared. We are very unlikely to evolve into some superior being that carries on the traditions and cultures of humans. We are much more likely to go extinct at some point no matter how sustainably we live as a species.

And finally, let’s assume that somehow future humans evolve and adapt so well that they are alive billions of years from now. At some point, our Sun will expand as part of its death throes and consume the Earth. No more life at all on Earth at that point. (I know some of you are saying that perhaps humans will populate the stars. I see no realistic prospect that humans could actually do this even if they could find Earth-like planets. First, the distances would likely be so great that even highly advance spaceships would still take so long to reach such planets that the chance of survival would be small. Second, the Earth-like planet would almost certainly have micro-organisms that would kill humans almost as soon as they landed. Instead of the Andromeda strain coming to us, we would go to it.)

As I’ve lengthened the time line, no doubt you’ve found yourself wondering why any of us today should be concerned about the sustainability of human society in a future that is so vast that it is several orders of magnitude longer than human civilization has so far existed. Good question. The continuity of human beings simply cannot be guaranteed indefinitely into the future regardless of what our genes, our minds, or several hundred Star Trek episodes may tell us. We are largely powerless in that regard.

Now, I am not minimizing the impulse to make the world a sustainable place for our progeny. I recognize that as a very strong drive. And, it is one that is featured in countless environmentally-oriented appeals. But I am looking for bedrock here. Is there a way of thinking about sustainability that doesn’t involve the inherently impossible task of seeking to assure human continuity indefinitely into the future? I think I have an answer.

Sustainable practices must be in and of themselves a path to a good life. If that’s the case, then they are worth implementing simply because they lead to happier and more fulfilling lives. We can take a cue from the simplicity movement which embraced simple living as more fulfilling. Let me illustrate. I ride my bicycle for most of my errands and for exercise as well. Even if there were no climate change problem, even if there were no peak oil problem, even if there were no sustainability crisis, riding my bicycle would still enhance the quality of my life. I’m more fit. I’m more in touch with my physical surroundings. Typically, I’m still moving when traffic is halted. I can get closer to my destination. I pay no parking fees. I find myself now in a kind of universal brotherhood with every other cyclist on the road (a very underrated plus). I could go on. But I think it would be possible to say something similar about any practice that is truly sustainable.

I’m not suggesting that we give up on the rhetoric of creating a sustainable future for our children. But I am suggesting adding to that pitch that almost everything we call sustainable would make us happier even absent the problems we are trying to solve. That means people would ultimately have no regrets about adopting sustainable habits because, in general, they give us a fuller, more compelling life.

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7 Comments on "Should we care about the human future? If so, how much?"

  1. Beery on Sun, 8th Apr 2012 2:09 pm 

    “the fossil record suggests that mammalian species such as humans have an average lifespan of 2 million years… If we date humans back to the beginning of the entire genus of hominids at least 4 million years ago, then humans are essentially in evolutionary overtime.”

    This is nonsense. It’s suggesting that mammalian species all spring up out of nothing and then 2 million years later, die out. If this were the case, there would be no mammals on the Earth. The author seems to ignore the fact that mammals have been here for a hundred million years – that means that some mammal species have been successful for that long, evolving into different species as they needed to do so. Humans are the most successful of these. Our first direct mammalian ancestors were around a hundred million years ago; our first direct animal ancestors were around hundreds of millions of years before that. As a species, homo sapiens has had a short history, but the first homo sapiens did not spring up out of the ground, like magic: he or she had a mother and father who were a slightly different species.

  2. oilforbreakfast on Sun, 8th Apr 2012 3:52 pm 

    There is no time limit for a species. If it successfully adapts to changes in its environment it will go on indefinitely. And not only are humans the most successfull species ever but we are so successful that we actually adapt the environment to ourselves. If we would only do what needs doing to become sustainable we would last as long as the universe – no reason why we couldn’t create our own spaceships that are self sustaining. We wouldn’t even need to find another planet to live on.

  3. MrEnergyCzar on Sun, 8th Apr 2012 4:01 pm 

    I’ve been preparing for Peak Oil for 5 years now, finally cut my oil addiction to very low levels…

    MrEnergyCzar

  4. devils advocate on Sun, 8th Apr 2012 6:36 pm 

    It is a fantastic place to live.
    Except for the people.
    The Humans.
    They seem to screw everything up.

  5. DC on Sun, 8th Apr 2012 8:20 pm 

    Q/As I’ve lengthened the time line, no doubt you’ve found yourself wondering why any of us today should be concerned about the sustainability of human society in a future that is so vast that it is several orders of magnitude longer than human civilization has so far existed

    Excellent, you meet all the qualifications for a senior manager\CEO or shareholder of an amerikan oil corporation, or a front-line fraker, tar-sander.

    If you want the real answer, humans never evolved the ability to care for the species as a whole. No really, we dont have that at all. What we do have is an evolved desire to protect ONLY those we can imediately see, namely our own imediate families and perhaps a few outside that limited circle. But thats about it. Since everyone is kind of doing the same thing more or less, it appears if you step back, that humanity has some kind of species-wide desire to care for its own future. But that is an illusion. It only appears that way from a distance. In reality we only evoloved to care for the imediate well-being of small tribal groups.

    We have a limited horizon for preserving the future because evolution never produced an instinct in us, we simply didnt need it. Just like our mental horizons are limited, we can grasp imediate short-term threats just fine, long-term subtle ones, barely at all. In fact, its that very blindless that the fossil-fuel cartels exploit with there ceaseless propaganda that oil is not harming anyone, that more cars is fine(long as there marginally more efficent). Denialists exploit the very thing hes talking about, and effectively too.

    None of this should come as suprise, humans have a hard time careing for anything beyond a generation or 3. Well, our limited perception makes its easy for christian creationiss to convince large #s of people, even in the the ‘advanced’ countries that the Earth is flat and 4000 old too. They further this amazeing display of ignorance by tacking on the absurb idea the universe is govered by a sadistic old man with a white flowing beard that has there best interests at heart. O and he gets really pissed if you DL internet porn too…apparently.

    As for being the most succesful species there Oily, what criterion do you apply? The dinosaurs as a group existed for at least 100 million years or longer as a discrete group. Sharks, at least as long. Far more successful than us, if simple time is your measure. We wont last 100million, I have my doubts well last another 1000 years at the rate we are going.

  6. SOS on Mon, 9th Apr 2012 12:09 am 

    Hyperbole. Humans live in three times.

    The past: its always better then we remember and certainly not sustainable, thats why so many things have changed. Just look back at how we have changed to achieve a sustainable culture.

    The present: its never as good as it could be, but it is certainly not sustainable either. Thats why we have so much change. It is so unsustainable we have to change by the minute to even keep it going.

    The future: a good place to look if you want a better world. Building a better life is a good first step, but if you want sustainability it can only be found in the future.

    Right now our future is brighter than it has ever been. We are unlocking vast new reserves of natural gas and oil. These reserves are now available because we are changing and growing into what we hope will become a sustainable future.

    Under current leadership the United States government is abusing its role in the management of federal lands. There are now bountiful supplies of energy available for development that we as citizens own. If we develop them properly they should look after a lot of financial problems including social security and the national debt, not to mention abundant affordable energy. Right now our government is blocking this development.

    Abundant, cheap energy is here if we want it. I certainly hope the people that are developing these new resources now are able to overcome the tremendous burden the government is putting on their ability to produce and our ability to consume.

  7. BillT on Mon, 9th Apr 2012 12:35 am 

    DC, excellent post! SOS, not so much.

    IF, we drilled our brains out, and sucked up all the oil and natural gas available in the Us’ 50 states and offshore, there is a MAX of 40 years total left to use. That MAX is not likely to ever be recovered as it may not exist.It is not “proven’ reserves, just educated guesses. So, if you are under 25,it will all be gone sometime during your 40s or 50s, max. Then what? What kind of world will you, your kids, your grand kids live in? Think “Mad Max:”.

    I hope we never tap most of those reserves and, if the human race is to survive, we need an event to shut down most of what we already are burning before it is too late.

    For over 67 years, people thought that the world would be destroyed by nukes. It appears that it will, instead, be destroyed by SUVs, senseless flights to ‘vacation’ at Disney, plastic I-toys, and wars of choice by the Empire. Or, you might call it Capitalism. Greed.

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