by JustinFrankl » Tue 24 Jan 2006, 13:29:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('backstop', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JustinFrankl', ' ')In a very broad sense, one of two things is about to happen, each of which has been unseen ever before in human history. Case One, that 6.5 billion people, given their different environments, beliefs, and understandings, will become sufficiently aligned toward a common goal involving radical changes in economics, government, law, science, spirituality, and social norms in time to avoid widespread suffering and systemic collapse. Or Case Two, that 6.5 billion people will keep doing what they've been doing and will run the train called "Civilization" straight into the side of a mountain, killing many if not most of the passengers.
Based on the widespread incomplete understanding of the ramifications of the problems we are facing concerning the peaking of oil, capitalism vs. conservation, efficiency, thermodynamics, ecology, and sustainability, Case One appears unlikely.
JF - Quite what your point is in writing the above seems unclear.
I do tend to wander a bit, and my ideas seem disconnected, I think because I'm making connections in my head that I'm not putting into what I'm writing.
The ultimate point I'm making is that one way or another, by choice or by reaction, managed or unmanaged, with courage or with fear, the world is about to change irrevocably. All the signs point to a massive reactive, fearful, chaotic change.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t appears to imply that we should measure the adviseability of taking action on supremely urgent threats
according to how many others we speculate will muck in and help.
It does appear to imply that, so let me clarify.
Perpetual growth is not possible. Therefore some kind of sustainability must be achieved. Sustainability can mean a stable population, it can also mean a wildly fluctuating population within certain bounds, like what is commonly found in chaotic (dynamic) modeling of populations.
But we cannot simply address the idea of perpetual growth, because to address that idea alone is, as Monte is fond of saying, a solution in isolation. The fact that Civilization continues to grow has an effect on all of the systems, and our perceptions of those systems, within Civilization. That we continue to grow affects directly our economics, our law, government, science, social norms, philosophy, spirituality, and the condition of the planet on which we live.
These systems and beliefs, in their current manifestation (how the majority of people are actually living their lives) and acceptance (how much people understand and accept what they learn about science, economics, spirituality, and the world they live in) in turn provide positive feedback to our system of growth, allowing us to keep growing.
These systems and beliefs also carry a great deal of physical infrastructure which we are dependent on in order to live our day-to-day lives. Changing how we live, fundamentally, will require changing that infrastructure, or changing how we use it, or designing and building something else, any of which will take a great deal of time.
The world will be alerted, in a very real way, of its need to change as available energy begins to decline (the peaking of oil and the natural gas cliff), but far too late to address changing the infrastructure in time. As available energy begins to decline, the systems designed for positive feedback and increasing population in an environment of increasing energy will, in an environment of decreasing available energy, serve to accelerate the decline of the population and systemic collapse.
So. It is my assertion that in the face of declining available energy that "the system" in which we all live is designed to screw us. Even if most of us gave up the system in favor of many other ways of living, any one subgroup, subculture, or nation-state that continues to grow unsustainably will present to the rest of us the same problem encountered by other stable societies, or slowly growing ones, when they encountered the Europeans centuries ago.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')his itself appears to reflect the widespread programmed conformism that currently afflicts Western cultures, -
- go with the herd,
"for safety's sake"along with the prevalence of an entrenched apathetic defeatism.