by kpeavey » Sun 16 Jan 2005, 09:46:46
Following the peak will be a slide as the world enters recession, depression and regression. As sectors of the economy break down, the interdependence civilzation has built will result, eventually, in complete collapse of giant industry, the financial system, and anything beyond regional trade.
The Transition from the ordered, energy-driven civilizatin we enjoy now and the sustainable, renewable energy dependent civilization is diificult to predict.
It can be expected that the death throes of civilization will see violence, starvation, disease and death on a scale the bible does not even discuss.
After things calm down, the survivors will have scavengry to fall back on. the cities and towns will be picked clean of any and all materials which can be used or converted to tools.
Eventually, tools will break down. Metals will rust, remnants of the modern world will disappear. If education survives, we may see a continuation of agriculture, barter, even the arts. We could still weave wool into textiles, fashion lumber for building material, on occasion even smelt scavenged iron to make a kettle or a hoe. The best we could hope for would be an extended Colonial America lifestyle. Eventually, the refined metal tools would be gone, replaced with stone, wood or glass.
If education does not survive, the people in the future would be dependent on the land for all their needs. Human nature tends to the tribal community. I think the American Indian is a potential example of where we may eventually end up. Sustainable, renewable, at harmony with the world.
As far as civilizatin iand technology reemerging, it is highly doubtful. Our civilization has pludered the high energy resources, and the easy to exploit mineral deposits. Future civilizations would not have these resources available. High technology is a one shot deal for this planet. Too bad we blew it.
We have seen the best material and scientific achievments humanity has to offer.
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face--for ever."
-George Orwell, 1984
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twenty centuries of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle, and what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
-George Yeats