Of course it depends on how one defines civilization. But economic upheaval, wars, famines, plagues and destruction have been with us from the beginning, it's mostly us Baby Boomers that think otherwise.
But I doubt the likelihood of a Close Encounters-like collapse of civilization where the dirty dishes are left on the table. Not if it means someday space travelers come across the NSA facility out in Utah and wonder who stored all those pointless phone conversations, FB selfies and cornie rants.
Humans are pretty resilient, here is Hiroshima today, who'd of thunk it...

I don't know what's at the other end of that spectrum from Nuke War, 40 years ago I wouldn't have guessed I'd be laughing at a video of a person
looking at her telephone so intently she would walk into a mall fountain – we're pretty inventive so who knows.
I've lived just long enough to see some cool inventions and have something to guage them against, the very thing I'm doing right now being the main one. I can't say some new technology would surprise me all that much. But,
really new technology like the transistor/semiconductor changes the
things you do rather than just how you do things. So instead of the invention of a cheap, renewable, environmentally friendly substance to fuel ICE suburban commutes and crosstown shopping trips, which we see so often touted here, I think it's more likely we'll reinvent suburban commutes and shopping trips.
There are lots of "solutions" to peak oil, just none that replicate cheap oil.
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As for other things, I'd like to think we'll be nicer to the planet but at this point we're more self-directed than ever (See: Selfie). But for the first time in a long time more people are moving to the city center than to the 'burbs. Perhaps that will mark a change, who knows?
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)