by ashurbanipal » Fri 25 Nov 2005, 13:53:53
I remember looking at an actuarial table for London for the year 1663, and I was really surprised at what it showed. There were quite a large number of deaths for a city of slightly fewer than 1 million inhabitants--about 25,000 that year, if I recall. Childbirth only accounted for some hundred or so deaths (I'm doing this by memory). Murder another couple hundred. Even the plague claimed less than 1000 people. Then there was the King's evil (undiagnosed tuberculosis, probably) that only killed 17 people. Rising of the Lights (Dropsy, not alien abduction) killed 38 people. And there were many other ways listed. But one thing killed more people than all the other causes combined. It stood out not just for the number, but for how inconceivable it is to us today. That cause was gingivitis--gum infection. Left untreated, gingivitis kills by locking the jaw and spreading to the brain/ neck. It killed close to 15,000 people that year, probably more painfully than we can imagine.
When Flemming invented penicilin, the first patient he tried it on was a police officer at a local hospital. The officer grew prize roses in his time off, and had been out tending them when a thorn scratched his cheek. It became infected, and then soon his entire head was infected. Flemming gave him penicilin and the infection started to go away, but he didn't have enough so eventually the officer died. Nevertheless, it was a promising enough outcome that penicilin was mass produced.
When I think about things like this, I wonder what a strange world it must have been that one might reasonably expect to die from being scratched on the cheek or from a gum infection. Personal hygiene was a vastly different thing 300 years ago. If you can imagine, people bathed no more often than once a week (more frequent use of water would have been considered extravagant and wasteful--the notion that people thought bathing would cause illness is mostly incorrect). Though we cannot know for sure, most people probably didn't have anything to clean themselves after defecating. Imagine what that must have been like--to walk around for a week without having wiped your ass, and then stepping into a bath after 2 other people had already used it, their own soil floating in the water.
The reason that trunks used to be (and still are in rural settings) kept at the ends of the bed was so that the bedclothes could be removed from the mattress in the morning, folded carefully and weighted with stones in the trunk. This helped smother the fleas and lice that lived there. Even in Roman built cities with underground sewers, cities stank like you probably wouldn't believe. Open or partially open sewers, people with multiple infections and lots of body odor, livestock, and butcher shops without refrigeration all contributed to the odor du-jour. And in this microbe-infested world our ancestors lived lives that we cannot imagine. But consider this if you want to know how bad it must have been: men were eager to die in a battle, rather than die old in bed. Consider that death in a war usually resulted from being cut to ribbons and lingering for weeks, and you get an idea what life was like.
Four things changed this state of affairs (in order of importance):
1) Development of large-guage pipes for carrying away waste-water.
2) Development of large scale water filtration systems to provide freer access to potable water.
3) Development of pesticides from petrochemicals.
4) Development of antibiotics.
Of all of these, only perhaps 4 might have been possible on a large scale basis without the widespread use of oil and the industrialization that came with it. But even that is doubtful. The others are not feasible without industry of some kind, and almost certainly the first three will not continue indefinitely post-peak.
With this as background, I have to wonder how anyone thinks that things will be better along any imaginable scale in a post-collapse world. Our ancestors bought into industrialization big-time for a reason. What's unfortunate is that they (and we ourselves) left us little to work with. We're not just looking at Peak Oil. We're looking at Peak water, peak fish, peak fertilizers, peak pesticides, and peak stable-climate. There were some romantic elements to life in, say, the late 1600's. Things were a lot slower, allowing time for contemplation and meditation for those so inclined. Honor still meant something. Recreational passtimes typically involved people relating to one another, not people relating to machines. There seems to have been a kind of vitality that people now lack.
What those who look forward to Peak seem to forget is that this picture of life depended on a certain natural balance staying in place, one that we cannot go back to for a long time. This picture of life relied, for instance, on a certain level of crop yields that in turn relied on good topsoil. We won't have that. This life relied on plentiful lumber. We won't have that. This life relied on plentiful stone that could be shaped at will. We won't have that. This life relied on a large number of people who worked themselves more or less to death at the behest of a church that commanded absolute faith, and could thus order society as necessary. No such church exists today. We will have to survive the rebuilding of our topsoil, the recycling of our stone, the replanting of our forrests, the repopulating of our oceans, all while the weather goes increasingly haywire. Saying this will not be easy is an understatement of stupefying proportion.
The worst criticism of Newtonian physics comes home to roost here: that the future is not distinguished from the past. Calculating the available energy by modulating time isn't going to tell the whole story, not by a long shot, because from time1 to time2, the type of energy available changes. Lots of our energy usage comes as embodied energy; some of it with enough of an inflection point that loss of petroleum or the equivalent locks us away from that embodiment forever. For instance, it's practically impossible to mass produce 4 foot pipe without heavy machinery. No process known to man, no matter how many people you employ, will give any meaningful output. Without large guage pipe, sewers cannot remain in a good state of repair forever. Eventually, they will fail. Cities without sewers will quickly become cess-pits; we will actually be worse off that way than people of 3 centuries ago. And there are thousands of other such examples that people scarcely notice. Not only will we learn, post-collapse, why our ancestors chose to industrialize, we will also learn the terrible price that must be paid for that temporary acquiescence in comfort. We cannot go back the way we came. But moving forward will be like wading through the detritus of the pre-industrial past, not like living it again.
This won't happen all at once, to be sure. But somewhere between ten and fifty years post peak, I think this is what we'll be looking at.