That's a flippant and facile way to dismiss a prediction. Of course you must be familiar with the story of the boy who cried "wolf". No doubt superficial thinkers will dismiss any dire prediction with the same blithe disregard as the people in that story dismissed the boy's cry for help. — Janus
And yet again, one cannot even wonder what to do about the various factual trends that have been observed and catalogued, because one has been diverted into a fruitless tit for tat argument about predictions. It's a lawyerly tactic of diverting attention away from the evidence that cannot be seriously questioned. And it is illegitimate and inappropriate. Objection, your honour. — unenlightened
A Problem might be that there is very little new to say about the problem, and a philosophy forum isn't necessarily the best place to look for expertise on how to deal with the ecological crisis. — Echarmion
I don't know what to say, except don't hold your breath waiting for insights, solutions or even recognition. My own recent thread on the topic was not terribly illuminating. — unenlightened
The real threat is not climate change, but our reaction to climate change. The real threat, as usual, is us. — Jake
Climate change (generated by us) is a real threat, and so we are a real threat insofar as we created it and are unwilling or unable to do anything to halt it or even ameliorate its effects by slowing down population and economic growth and exploitation of resources. — Janus
The real threat is not climate change, but our reaction to climate change. The real threat, as usual, is us. — Jake
Climate change could indeed be the deciding source of stress, but there are other more immediate potential sources, such as a 2008 style collapse of the financial system which isn't successfully managed. — Jake
Well, it isn't a Ponzi Scheme, it's a simple case of the market mechanism.I think perhaps the greatest potential rapidly precipitating threat (aside from possible ecological catastrophes such as the collapse of the Greenland and/or West Antarctic ice sheets) could be a collapse of what appears to be a gigantic Ponzi scheme: the US shale oil industry, a collapse due to the impossibility of sustaining oil prices at a level sufficient to yield and actual profit to that industry. — Janus
Well, it isn't a Ponzi Scheme, it's a simple case of the market mechanism. — ssu
Like um…. Silicon Valley and the IT-sector have done now for decades?It's a Ponzi scheme if it is running on investors' capital, and not on reinvestment of profits, and there is no plausible likelihood of there ever being a return of the investors capital investment, let alone a profit. — Janus
Like um…. Silicon Valley and the IT-sector have done now for decades?
Besides, 11 million barrels per day and being the 3rd largest producer in the World doesn't sound like a Ponzi scheme. — ssu
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