by Ibon » Thu 17 Oct 2013, 04:34:37
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I think that achieving such a state of wisdom is about 1% as likely as viable space colonies. Feel free to disagree, but have the details to back up your opinion.
I pretty much agree with your assessment with a key exception that has been rehashed here in the past. In this sense I am perhaps slightly more optimistic than some here. I put the likelihood above 1%. But yes,well below 50%
The cycles of bloom and die-off and bloom and die-off that you describe is related to the question whether humans are like yeast. We do not have a long enough history of human civilization that either proves or disproves whether we can break this cycle. That remains an open question. That is where the question of culture comes into play. Once cultural evolution (memes) accelerated beyond that back drop of our biological legacy (genes) we have been on a fast track. When story telling was augmented by scribes and then by the printing press and finally the digital revolution the replication of memes accelerated.
On a global scale this is the first time that humans have exceeded their carrying capacity. Every example you can pull from history; Mayans, Romans, Greenlanders, Easter Islanders, etc, you see a singular bio-region with a singular monoculture usually dependent on a single resource base; corn, timber, etc. These past civilizations where held strongly hostage within the paradigms they lived in. Today we live in a global environment that is rapidly following the same course. Capitalism and consumerism is becoming the singular dominant paradigm. That is why some folks like John Michael Greer argue that there is no real difference whether the overshoot is global or not. Another point from JMG is that of anabolic collapse. This is particularly important for you to read Kaiser Jeep if you haven't already. Here is a link
http://www.ecoshock.org/transcripts/gre ... llapse.pdf One main point is that as societies become more complex and they age the amount of energy required to repair and maintain that complexity grows to the point that collapse follows. This point probably more than any other is what will doom the likelihood of space travel ever happening.
Now back to the point why I am more than 1% optimistic. I see the upcoming consequences as potentially transformative to our culture. One of the threads here where that was discussed was about the Worshipping of the Overshoot Predator. You can read that here
viewtopic.php?f=45&t=68063I see the times ahead as similar to the middle east 2000 years ago with the birth of monotheism or to the time of the founding fathers of our constitution here in the US. A moment where convergences happening culturally allowed for a new paradigm of thought. In the case of the middle east the clash of Greek, Roman, Egyptian and all the other tribes made everyone question their own particular beliefs and this opened the door to tremendous turmoil but to then the birth of new cultural attributes some of which have lasted until today.
The very very gut wrenching and brutal consequences of overshoot will represent a very cruel bottleneck that 7-9 billion humans will be pressed through many not surviving and if this is spread through a couple of generations will similarly create major turmoil. It is in this soup of turmoil that new paradigms are born.
Think about this. 2000 years ago the biosphere wasn't a concept. It was invisible just like oxygen and you only know that it is there when you take it away. How could any of our moral or ethical spiritual or religious traditions ever have placed any tabus or moral tenants around caring for our biosphere or staying within carrying capacity when our biosphere never was visible. Even during the first 200 years of our industrial revolution the biosphere was invisible. In fact our biosphere only started to come into focus collectively say around 50 years ago when the first threats started entering as memes in our culture.
Well I have news that all of you know already. Our biosphere will become more and more transparent, more tangible and in our faces like never before as the threats to it manifest as consequences in the decades ahead. The Overshoot Predator is now in REM sleep and ready to awaken.
For the first time modern civilization will engage with it. Will we be like yeast and be tethered without cultural attributes to cycle through the blooms and die-offs or will we modify our morals and ethics and extend the concepts of compassion and altruism and sustainability to include our biosphere, an entity that up to about 50 years did not even exist in our human minds.
That question cannot be answered. To say there is only a 1% chance of any hope of our civilization eventually figuring out how to stay within carrying capacity simply ignores the powerful force that the upcoming die-off will play in our spiritual, religious, political, economic institutions.
We have never stayed culturally static since we started replicating memes starting with storytelling. To assume that we will remain culturally static through the upcoming die-off and not adapt to a biosphere that is becoming visible and full of wrath is highly unlikely. We will culturally evolve. I give humans about a 20% chance of embedding sustainable principals into their institutions after we pass through the bottle neck and come out leaner, wiser and humiliated.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
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