Around 81-96 AD the last book of the Christian Bible was written, Revelations. Chapter 16, the Apocalypse of St. John, was included. Predicting the End of the World has been popular ever since, especially in Christianity.
Thousands of versions of apocalypse. Thousands of predictions of doom. In my Junior HS Science Class in the 1960s, we gravely discussed the then-popular prediction of an approaching Ice Age, sure to doom us all in walls of ice. Grimly enjoyable, in it's way.
It's just as popular today, just this past month we have discussed at least a half dozen forms of doom. Here at peakoil.com, we wallow in doom, striving to predict and forecast doom, to squeeze out every morsel of enjoyment.
All of these thousands of grim predictions over the last 20 centuries or so have one thing in common. They have each and every prediction been completely wrong, because the world stubbornly will not end. I mean, really bad things happened, like the Dark Ages, the Spanish Influenza, and World Wars. But now there are more than 7.7 Billion humans and the world still has not ended. In fact, never have the portents been more serious, the signs of doom more explicit, the dangers greater, or the predicting of doom more enjoyable.
Still, <yawn>. I have to say, the most likely outcome in the decades and even centuries ahead, is that the world will not end.
So Sorry!