by onlooker » Wed 04 Feb 2015, 15:09:00
I place this quote because H2 posted this well thought out post and it does make sense for the most part. However, I disagree somewhat in that we can make rational decisions if pressed to do so. We witness and act as such when having to problem solve and when an important decision needs to be made correctly. Our situation going forward will more and more involve problem solving and will be of highest import involving our very survival. So the impetus and motivation to practice rationality will be at the greatest level. Here goes the quote:
h2:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'k')ublikhan seems to be making the classic error of believing that humans actually made a series of rational decisions about how to get where we are today, and can thus turn around and make another series of rational decisions about how to unwind our mess. This is a nice fantasy, though you'll be hard pressed to find a single historical example of this happening in any failing ecosystem/society. The myth of rational man is really strong, a nice fairy tale, and no matter what actual data you find that shows that is simply not the case, ie, it's an illusion, some people can't let go of that fantasy. I see no more rationality in our current behavior among industrialized/agricultural humans that I see in the behavior of ant colonies. Maybe less, since those tend to reach an equilibrium state with their environment, unlike industrial man.
Europeans filled the Americas because they were overpopulated, and they had the means to move around cheaply enough to make that possible, and they had portable food supplies that let them overrun the natives and just overwhelm them. There was nothing rational in the process. Rationality builds the tools etc, just ask the germans about their use of it to solve their issues in ww II. And large scale agricultural man filled europe, pushing aside all the original inhabitants, who were doing fine for a long time before that.
I don't currently see how any nation state out there can adopt a rational course, which means, terminate resource exploitation instantly, stop carbon fuel burning instantly, terminate the system of wealth/power distribution based on non sustainable practices, and then rationally accept that the unsustainable populations will not be sustained. And after that, rationally work to become sustainable again, as we've done before, here and there throughout our history as bipeds. But that's not going to happen, because it never has. What will happen no longer requires future sight, it's already here now, and you can see it everywhere you look. I had some hope for Bolivia, but the pressures of overpopulation, oddly enough, make taking actual rational actions nearly impossible politically speaking, and they couldn't do it either, if they couldn't, nobody can I believe.
Reason isn't what drives our variants of homo something, sapiens is a stupid self picked name, we do walk on two legs, but we generally don't know very much, sad to say. Ants also, by the way, solve complicated engineering problems, farm, have social hierarchies, etc, but they don't think they are hot sh#t because of that, they just go about their ant business, just like we go about ours, without a clue generally why we do what we do, but happy to solve various technical problems on the way, just like ants.
There have been peoples that have managed to avoid this trap, they always share a few traits, by necessity, one is to form taboos against psychotic behaviors like overpopulating their ecosystems, just like we've formed taboos against not doing so. Another is to form social rules that exist within nature, and allow a fitting in with nature by their nature, so to speak.
It's not an accident that it's been said through the ages that man lives in a world of illusion, maya, and sees reality as if through a veil, it's something in how our brains work when they get disconnected from nature I believe, not positive, but that seems most likely. Actual connection with nature minute by minute has auto correct features in it, ie, if you fail to do the right things, you die, your people die. The solution has always been to just stop, but people make up excuses why we or they can't, incredible mental constructs saying why we can't stop. And that's because the actual motivations are totally irrational, it's like telling or asking an anthill to stop, they wouldn't be able to process the request any more than we can.
So the op question of why overpopulation is a taboo topic is the right question in a sense, but the problem with taboos is you can't really talk your way around them. Try it with some you might recognize, like incest, for example. Give it a whirl, explain to someone why you should be able to have sex with your child. You won't have much luck, because all taboos turn off that stuff and promote whatever they promote, by working at a deeper level, pre-rational. Once our current behavior becomes taboo, which it has to in order for us to change our course, then standard modern behaviors like greed arrogance, vice, etc, will once again be seen as taboo, dirty things that no self respecting person would do, because that's how it is, and every right thinking person knows that.
I know some variant of humanity will figure this out again, but I doubt it will be us, we've been genetically engineering ourselves for ages now to be removed from nature, so it's hard to see how we'll be the ones to actually solve the problem. It may never get solved, of course, it will be hard to tell, but it is nice to see that it was solved during some ages in some places, those were where people lived sustainably for thousands of years, you can only do that if you've solved the riddle, and it's been solved, and it will be solved again. But not by 7 billion people, just look back at global populations re industrialism and that gives an idea of how many there will be able to do that, maybe less since we've really ruined a lot of land mass, and have made or are making big chunks unlivable for a long time.
It's a real question if it's even possible to live rationally in an irrational world, as well. Probably not, it's like trying to live here without money.
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