by peripato » Fri 01 Feb 2008, 22:33:19
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'p')eripato wrote:
You're wrong Pal - we're not against technology per se. The issue we have is that technology can never solve the problems generated by perpetual economic and population growth.
Wrong. It can, and it frequently does.
Ok oily give us an example of when and where this has happened? You can’t because you’d have to run the perpetual growth engine experiment until the end. Only when all extractable finite resources are used up, the majority of other species eliminated, and industrialization has filled the world with man-made objects, and we can still survive, if not the breakdown of natural systems, then at least the inevitable breakdown in mechanical ones, only then oily can your case be proved. But you know the experiment can only be run once, if the artificial world fails then there is no natural one left to fall back on.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'p')eripato wrote:
These are social and political problems first and foremost. Concentrating on the techno-fix as the answer to all our environmental and resource woes just digs us into a deeper hole, since technology is no substitute for non-renewable resources or natural habitat, of which our bloated populations are completely dependent on.
Among other things, increased technology makes things more efficient. That is, we can do more with less. The more efficient things become, the fewer resources we will need.
There's nothing you can do about growing populations. But that too, is a problem which is solving itself anyway, thanks in large part to technolgy: In technological societies, population growth slows down, and even starts to decline. Here, read this: The Global Baby Bust.
) conservation measures are futile.
A troll is someone who makes points you cannot effectively rebut.