at the moment we unleash all atomic weapons, the future will resemble the past, humanity's future would be indistinguishable from its past - stone age. — TheMadFool
It appears that, the way I see it, a certain level of destructive ability or power if you will, once attained and used, the past and the future are identical. There's a reflection symmetry between the past and the future, the line of symmetry being the ultimate world-ending weapon or event if one takes into consideration such things as giant asteroids. In our case, according to some, nuclear weapons have the power to, well, "...send us back to the stone age..." i.e. at the moment we unleash all atomic weapons, the future will resemble the past, humanity's future would be indistinguishable from its past - stone age. — TheMadFool
I don't imagine humankind could survive the fall of modern civilisation. There are too many of us, and we are too alienated from the processes of production to retreat to the rural idyll should something fry all the microchips — counterpunch
An interesting point of view but the way I see it, the world's technology is known to only a small segment of humanity, there maybe, at the most, only a few million (scientists, technologists, machinists, roboticists) of us who can, if forced to, rebuild the technological infrastructure from scratch and I haven't even mentioned those involved in the supply chain of raw materials; the rest, the majority, know next to nothing about technology. The chances are, if a global catastrophe does occur, those who survive will be technologically illiterate and hence the stone age scenario is a real possibility. — TheMadFool
in short, asteroid impacts and nuclear holocausts bring about their effects suddenly instead of gradually like how it happened in the past. — TheMadFool
terms of harmony, equilibrium with one's environment, we get an F. — TheMadFool
Just wondering if there's a reset button for the earth and even for the universe itself. K-Pg extinction event? — TheMadFool
You speak of the fall of civilisation of Rome, but there may have been civilisations and cycles long before this. — Jack Cummins
Atlantis — Jack Cummins
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