by moobradidi » Sun 27 Jan 2008, 21:10:26
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('americandream', 'T')his genie is out of the bottle and isn't going back. Whether the technology will translate to the scope and breadth of application to tackle the current problems and whether it is scaleable are two major hurdles to leap. In addition, whether it will be benign enough to have a risk free application is another. We simply do not know.
However, the ultimate question is whether we are contented with seeing narcissistic capitalism enjoy another period of unassailable supremacy and is the one I suspect plaguing most minds from the responses I have read. I detect a weariness with this system, a sense of disconnect. Consequently, the question of what technology we use to improve the quality of life of our species is not the core issue. That issue really is what sort of system do we believe will deliver us that quality. In the process, we would have to ask ourselves, what do we expect of that system and is it capable of maintaining a modicum of lifestyle quality.
In answering that question, remember every system rises from the foundations of what preceded it. No system stands entirely unblemished from the past. We have only to look at the history of mankind to see this fact.
Much of this is values based. The world is far from perfect. Always has been. It's debatable whether it was actually worse in the past. From a human standpoint it could well have been.
When it comes to practicalities, the species has little use for whether it feels disconnected right now. It has and always will want to survive.
We are indeed a virus on the planet, on a growth binge, but we
deserve this no less than insects of any other successful life form.
In the end nature is indifferent. Life will always be here in some
form and nature couldn't care less what it is. Just as long as it is.
So if we're a smart virus we owe it to ourselves to keep going.
Narcissistic capitalism isn't perfect, but depending on your values
medieval slavery was worse.