by Ibon » Tue 24 Mar 2015, 19:50:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Timo', '
')Very good argument. My only refutation would be that, given that humanity has never faced the external need for self-regulation, we don't know how to do it, and thus won't. Our present state as a species is the result of 10,000 years of cultural and technological evolution, based on the circumstances present at the time our advances occurred. Agreed, we're entering uncharted territory in the 21st Century. We may succeed in another stage of human evolution, but i doubt it. I believe we've already destroyed the planet, and it's starting to enter those stages where most life will die off. That time frame will be a century, or two, but in the end, only a few stragglers will remain to keep on living as human beings. It will be a fresh start for humanity, just like for Noah and his family. BTW, i don't believe in that story, but it makes a good reference point for my argument.
You know Timo, I cannot argue as well with your logic and what you are constructing here is totally compatible with what we know of our species. If I try to persist on making a case otherwise than all I am doing is stubbornly holding on to a personal narrative. My argument above is offering nothing more than a chance, fragile and improbable as it may be. Still, what we do not know is what get's permanently lost and what gets instilled and what stays the same on this downward trajectory in terms of our culture. Our religions may have shown incredible resilience as Pops points out and may as well be so full of self rationalizations and self delusions as to be teflon proof to looking within at its own shortcomings but one thing none of us can argue is that events in the century to come are going to severely test this resilience. Do we remain fixed to our collective graves down to a few stragglers to the bitter end or is there transformational inflection points through consequences on the way that then get incorporated into a new collective tribal alliance.
Scientists and secular atheists can argue, and I am among them, that the greatest threat to religion has been science and secular thought. There are those that have argued that science and technology is as flawed as religion because it has given us nothing more than a new religion, one of belief in progress. Both traditional religions and the secular religion in believing in technology and progress keeps the human squarely in the narcissistic center.
I remain very confident that consequences will knock us off this hubris and that it really is not selective for our collective survival.
Maybe that is partially what worshiping the Overshoot Predator is also about. Worshiping the forces that will correct our collective hubris, that will expose our collective fallacy that we are omnipotent and in control here.
I think cracking that hubris open through consequences will open up a potential spiritual renaissance. Extinction or living like the Mayans in grass huts in the shadows of our former pyramids and having learned nothing is probable as well.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com