by Outcast_Searcher » Fri 20 Apr 2012, 01:28:07
This would seem to me to be part of a larger philosophical question about: "What makes a "good" life, or a life worth living?"
Is it worthwhile to do the "right thing", even if you personally won't benefit noticably?
This is an intensely personal issue, when it comes down to it. Throughout history, people have been arguing (and sadly, killing each other) over "what is right". Religion is one of the most obvious philosophical points of view, although so much emotion is attached to it (people get mighty wound up about the possibility of magically obtaining "paradise" and "eternal life" - which tends to throw logic straight out the window).
One of my favorite authors, Kurt Vonnegut, talked about this principle briefly but brilliantly in one of his later novels, "Timequake". (I am paraphrasing here) "I am a humanist, which means, in part, that I have tried to behave decently WITHOUT ANY EXPECTATION OF REWARDS OR PUNISHMENTS AFTER I'M DEAD." (Emphasis, mine).
I found this extremely profound, and touching.
So as for me, the answer to the "saving energy" question is a resounding "NO". Saving energy is NOT pointless. AGW MAY be true. Saving energy MAY give future generations a better chance to find a sustainable way of life without destroying the entire biosphere, or at least everything bigger than a cockroach.
(This would be true WHATEVER the ultimate form of destiny, reality, and/or religion might turn out to be, BTW).
Cheers.
....
(Feel free to pointlessly attack me now, since I don't subscribe to believing in "diety X" without any evidence for its existence, or being concerned about ours).
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.