by Omnitir » Tue 24 Jul 2007, 22:47:50
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Omnitir', ' ')Likewise, the oil age has not entirely been about wasting our one time gift in pursuit of a high standard of living. While that is mostly what people have cared about, it's disingenuous to assume that the spending of the oil lottery payout has been entirely a waste, when it can be argued that, like the analogy of buying a house, this spending has been a form of investment that may or may not pay off.
I see no sign of any possible energy dividend from the Squanderville investment.
That's because you, like many posters, are not interested in technology. Now I'm not saying here that you (and others) are Neo-Luddite, but I am saying that there is a clear dislike of shiny, gimicky, science-fictiony sounding technologies. These are irrelevant, right? These are merely symptoms of human hubris that fail to acknowledge that nature always bats last, right?
Perhaps, but that's besides the point. Regardless of whether one believes that any 'technofix' may ever be possible or not, the point is that a technologically sustainable future is what we have been investing our fossil energy supply into (mostly unintentionally though).
We may have only cared about the latest consumer toy, the fastest car, the coolest entertainment etc., however investing in these things has not only resulted in instant gratification, but has also resulted in progress.
For instance, in the demand for the greatest possible television technology, we advance the possibilities of solar power. In our desire for more powerful computers, we have greatly accelerated most technologies to a point where many technologies are beginning to behave and perform like information technologies - and accelerate at a similar pace.
Maybe in twenty years accelerating technology will give us our first molecular nano-factories, revolutionising all manufacturing and dropping energy demands to a minuscule amount. Or perhaps in the future solar technology may approach the point where we can capture that tiny fraction of sunlight we need to power everything.
Maybe we won't get there, maybe we will, it is besides the point. The point is, love it or hate it, this is the future we have been heavily investing our fossil wealth into. We haven't been "squandering" our energy gift, we have actually been investing in a
possible sustainable future. By seeking the latest in instant gratification, we have been pushing science and technology forwards at an accelerating rate, giving us the
chance to become a truly sustainable civilization through advanced technology.
And that is perhaps the most important point to note: the sustainable future that we have actually been investing in over the oil age, if achieved, will be the most sustainable possible world we could live in, lasting many orders of magnitude longer than any agrarian view of a sustainable world. We have chosen to shoot for true long-term sustainability that is only possible with radically advanced technology, rather than merely trying to make what limited resources we have on this little planet last as long as possible until nature decides to wipe us out in short order.
As MonteQuest is fond of saying “nature bats last”. The only truly long-term sustainability we can possibly have is one where our species isn’t subject to the will of nature on this tiny planet. Investing our fossil fuel gift “wisely” in living a low-tech sustainable lifestyle would have guaranteed our short term (in the geographical sense) demise at the hand of nature as she bats last. But striving for a high-tech future as we are, gives us the
chance to diminish the force of the bat that nature is holding over us, perhaps even eliminate it entirely.
The fossil energy gift wasn’t squandered; it was just invested in a high risk/high gain scheme. We risk losing everything slightly quicker than if we strived for sustainability from the beginning, but we have a shot at achieving true sustainability, and perhaps outliving Mother Earth and even the stars themselves. Hardly a squandered gift.
"Mother Nature is a psychopathic bitch, and she is out to get you. You have to adapt, change or die." - Tihamer Toth-Fejel, nanotech researcher/engineer.