Either way, there are a number of serious - species-threatening or world-threatening - things that we might chose to be concerned about. — Pattern-chaser
Pertinently, a nuclear attack isn't imminent. — S
You will list other problems in an attempt to sweep nukes under the rug — Jake
No, I'll observe that nukes are one of a number of existential threats. — Pattern-chaser
Yes, a global nuclear war could start without warning, but it probably won't. — Pattern-chaser
I choose to spend my retirement philosophising, not digging a deep bunker in the garden. — Pattern-chaser
I will add no further comments on this sub-sub-topic. :up: — Pattern-chaser
This sub-sub-thread is going nowhere. — Pattern-chaser
Your wellcome.Some of you have done your job of challenging my thesis. You've failed, but you have tried, and I thank you for that. — Jake
Perhaps you live in the Western Hemisphere and hence it's difficult for you to understand, but Europe and even Japan were quite up and running in a short time afterwards and their culture and civilization remained even if WW2 killed 61 million from 2,3 billion people (equivalent to our times would be over 200 million killed).We've always overcome these problems because civilization remained in tact. As example, WWII was a massive calamity but we recovered from it because enough of civilization (primarily the Western Hemisphere) remained up and running. — Jake
What you don't understand is that just with US and Russia, the 'all-out' nuclear war looks dramatically different than during the Cold War. — ssu
There definately is a difference. Ten times of a difference.There is no meaningful difference between 2,000 nukes landing on a country and 20,000 nukes landing on a country. — Jake
Now you are talking about a country that is attacked by nuclear weapons. But how about South America? There's no nukes pointed there. Or other countries that aren't belligerents? A lot of countries are and could be self sufficient in their food supply, rationing works. Globalization surely will take a hit, but just how permanent would the disaster be in the end? You see, if we compare nuclear war to an asteroid hitting the Earth, we truly have to take the scale into consideration: the Chicxulub impactor delivered an estimated energy of 10 billion Hiroshima A-bombs. That is way much more than all the nuclear bombs in the World combined. Comparing our man made nuclear war to an asteroid hitting the Earth isn't simply in the same category.Even a handful of nukes on key transportation hubs would disrupt the human food supply chain leading to social and political chaos in short order. How many days of food do you have in your house right now? How many days? Complacency depends entirely on the blind faith that we'll always be able to reliably replenish those supplies. Once that faith is broken, chaos begins to flourish. — Jake
While belonging to "the world" (hence I don't live in the US), I may have to disagree a bit with that. Not everything revolves around you and everything wouldn't collapse without the US. And I do you think you underestimate the capabilities of the US states to organize an emergency transitional government, have elections, have the Capital moved to somewhere else during the time Washington DC is rebuilt.A single small nuke in Washington DC would wipe out the heart of the US national government, paving the way for geo-political instability all over the world. — Jake
If you're run out of things to say on the topic that's because you haven't given the subject very much thought — Jake
So when I counter your argument of "if you want to make comparisons, you should be talking about civilization crushing threats like incoming giant asteroids" by stating how totally different event these are, your answer is to say I'm not clearly qualified in this conversion?Ok, thank you for engaging, but you're clearly not qualified to participate in this conversation, at least not to a level that can hold my interest. See you in some other thread. — Jake
Seems like anything that doesn't support your conclusion aren't in your interest. — ssu
(And this was an answer to your opinions in the first page)Defining those who don't see things your way, or who have other priorities, as irrational or literally insane, ironically, does not strike me as motivated by reason, but rather by ideology. — S
After studying a masters degree in the university, have to confess that many academic people won't do this.When you can... Dumb it down. — Lif3r
So, really, to be clear, what I'm really talking about is that we philosophers are morons with a rich fantasy life. As example, my fantasy is that typing all this over and over again is going to ever accomplish anything. — Jake
No, it isn't, but one might argue that the threat is. — Pattern-chaser
Either way, there are a number of serious - species-threatening or world-threatening - things that we might chose to be concerned about. Nuclear war is one of them. Is it really worth arguing any more about this? I think not, and I will add no further comments on this sub-sub-topic. — Pattern-chaser
I am going to go from personal experience and say that I for one am somewhat intimidated by some philosophers and deep thinkers because I know that they have more knowledge on many subjects than I do. — Lif3r
The dispute, as I see it, is over the misleading rhetoric. — S
I think that many have noticed that.As example, there's little deep thinking in my posts above. — Jake
Or actual knowledge about nuclear war either. What you've just done is to get fixated with the nuclear war scare and with the exaggerations of the imminent doom of civilization so typical 30 years ago. And we know why the discourse was and is still so apocalyptic. If the effects of nuclear weapons have been greatly exaggerated, there is a very good reason: since these weapons are indeed extremely dangerous, any posturing and exaggeration which intensifies our fear of them makes us less likely to use them. From this logic also follows then that any discussion where nuclear weapons and war wouldn't be described as being so catastrophic to humanity would (somehow) get us closer to using them. This was very typical during the Cold War.All I've done in my comments above is apply simple, straightforward, common sense to the reality that our culture has a gun in it's mouth, and we are largely ignoring this remarkably huge fact. That doesn't require deep thinking, or specialized knowledge, or a PhD. — Jake
Dear Professor Dimwit, — Jake
Are there thousands of hydrogen bombs on hair trigger alert poised to erase at least Western civilization at the push of a button, or not?
Yes? Or no? — Jake
Please observe how you will now display an inability to answer a simple yes or no question based on widely agreed upon facts in a straightforward direct manner.
That's because you're not actually interested in the topic being discussed, but in the experience of debate. That's not wrong, but neither is it interesting. — Jake
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