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09-30-2019, 08:01 PM | #562 (permalink) | |
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I agree, but unfortunately China and eugenics in general have rather made it taboo to even talk about overpopulation as a problem at all.
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09-30-2019, 08:01 PM | #563 (permalink) | |
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The incentive doesn't seem to mean much so I stand by my analogy.
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09-30-2019, 08:09 PM | #565 (permalink) | |
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Most of the science fiction scenarios underestimated the potential for computing technology. As such in many ways the advances in that field have exceeded past expectations. They under estimated the importance of innovative farming technologies and genetic engineering. As such those areas have also exceeded past expectations. So we don't have flying cars and other goofy sci Fi **** that serves little practical purpose. We do have other innovations that were largely overlooked. As for cleaner energy, there is already a blueprint for the types of technologies you could see becoming more prominent. We're entirely capable of doing so. Whether we do or not will be a simple matter of what our priorities are. |
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09-30-2019, 08:27 PM | #566 (permalink) | |
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I don't think our problems are a lack of technology. Our problem is that we are incapable as a species of concerted long term planning. We plan by quarters, not by decades, and I don't see that changing anytime soon, if ever, and when faced with as overwhelming a problem as the current global climate crisis or pollution I don't think we're going to offset our short-sighted wastefulness with tech band-aids.
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09-30-2019, 08:32 PM | #567 (permalink) |
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It's possible we won't and then we're ****ed
But literally the only serious solution is in technology and regulation. It doesn't even necessarily take long term intensive planning. When we developed the computer, we weren't planning for a future dominated by computers. It grew naturally because of its inherent utility. If the right form of energy were introduced which was clean and efficient enough, it would naturally take the place the older more dirty technology. Similarly, if carbon and/or methane trapping technology were to emerge, it would give us an even better ability to try reverse the trend of climate change. We have already made some improvements in that regard over the last couple centuries in the richer parts of the world. Not nearly enough, but there is certainly a notable difference between the modern US vs the US during the height of industrial growth, where rivers were literally set on fire accidently because of how polluted they were. With regard to population the only serious alternative is to kill off most of the population and revert to a sort of pre industrial agrarian system. Which, to me, is not even really preferable to human extinction via climate change. Last edited by jwb; 09-30-2019 at 08:41 PM. |
09-30-2019, 08:37 PM | #568 (permalink) | |||
...here to hear...
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In Africa, systematic rape has been used as a way to subdue locals, causing a population spike. In America, the mormons are the fastest growing religion and their beliefs encourage families of 10, 20 kids. Quote:
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This is a point that ties into Anteater's comment about improving food production. Yes, that might help short-term, but unfortunately, there is a drawback: food production generates methane and food consumption generates methane. Methane levels are set to jump to historically ( and pre-historically) high levels, quite possibly outranking CO2 as the biggest driver of global warming.
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09-30-2019, 08:39 PM | #569 (permalink) | ||
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Honestly I think the situation won't lead to human extinction, just a vast change in human civilization preceded by some sort of anarchic dark age. With any luck that will partially solve the problem to at least to a manageable level by killing off a portion of the population and reducing industrial capacity.
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09-30-2019, 08:48 PM | #570 (permalink) |
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You think the EPA is a waste of time then yea?
As for your scenario it sounds unlikely to me. The chances of maintaining the same sort of post industrial revolution lifestyle while killing off a sizable portion of humanity sounds unlikely. If anything I think it would look more like Rome after the fall. The modern infrastructure would completely collapse. |