Do you think we should actively engineer adaptation? Or should we let Nature tell us where to put our resources? — frank
1. Climate change is unstoppable. — unenlightened
2. Social collapse will be worldwide, and in the next 10 years or so.
3. This will involve Flooding caused by sea-level rises displacing huge populations, decline in crop yields leading to starvation even in developed countries, collapse of infra-structure, power, clean water particularly.
4. There's fuck all to be done to stop it.
5. So what might we do or think or discuss in the meantime?
Even if society takes 50 to 100 years to fall apart completely, we are already on a down hill slope. — Bitter Crank
Yes, and all this overwrought discussion triggered by an old snake oil salesman. — Brett
But notice how angry Jake comes if you point out that exploding all the nuclear weapons in the World creates way far less energy (and soot and dust to the upper atmosphere) than did the latest mass extinction event, the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event. Yeah, obviously just saying that I'm denying that nuclear weapons pose a danger.This is true. A full-out exchange of bombs among the existing nuclear powers would result in massive fire storms which would greatly extend the initial blast damage, and would throw up so much soot and dust into the upper atmosphere that climate would start cooling rapidly. The world would not freeze, but agriculture might dwindle to virtually nothing for a few years -- long enough for the survivors to starve. Then there is radiation on top of everything else, and a lost of vast stores of resources. — Bitter Crank
If you cant accept that, will you please prove that it's wrong? — frank
Even if society takes 50 to 100 years to fall apart completely, we are already on a down hill slope. There just won't be a happy ending, I am afraid (and I am afraid). — Bitter Crank
No climatologist sees any reason that the species itself will be threatened by climate change. Whether civilization can also survive is another question. We've never been here before. We have no experience to draw on in making a guess. — frank
Not to mention that it has nothing whatsoever to do with climate scientists' area of expertise. — Terrapin Station
There are way too many variables. — Terrapin Station
And to the moderators: this is actually on topic, and if you don't understand that, it's because, as you've been doing throughout the whole thread, you're skimming the conversation and jumping to incorrect conclusions. So quit fucking picking on me. — frank
A short story of my own: all of us have experienced storms. Rain, wind, snow, whatever. Today brutal, tomorrow sunny and pleasant, tomorrow's yesterday an interesting memory. That is our collective experience: the joy of weather.There is near complete scientific consensus that man's burning fossil fuels are impacting the climate. However, it is also important to acknowledge that at this moment of time there is no scientific consensus on the timing or extent or effects of climate change....
A side story to make the point. A very very long time ago I worked on a project to improve propeller efficiency in large ships to save fuel. — Rank Amateur
"Reasonably"? In my understanding, a useful conception for understanding climate change is men who burst into a crowded restaurant with a gun and start shooting people indiscriminately. In such a setting, one does, or does not. Being "reasonable" is an unaffordable luxury. I fear that even now most folks, with respect to climate change, are engaging in luxury they cannot afford. and the bill will be paid by them, their children, their grandchildren, and so on.There is always a gap between real life, and scientifically modeled life. And it rare that we can accurately account for all the consequences of the actions we take in complicated systems. All that said the science of climate change is good, and we should do what we can reasonably do to mitigate and move away from fossil fuels, whether we can or can not accurately measure the impacts, or know all the consequences. — Rank Amateur
Amen!no free lunch.
technology makes nature less cruel to us, — fdrake
I think this is Deeply Shallow. As if nature is not our mother and sustainer. As if we are not the product of nature. It's odd, because this is the trope one more often finds coming from the other side - humans are natural, therefore motor cars are natural. Well indeed, and extinctions are natural. But then nature is not cruel or kind and nothing is better or worse than any other. — unenlightened
Technology allows us to hack nature; literally, technology is a giant machete. We attack our mother with a machete and then accuse her of cruelty. We need to change our mindset at this archetypal level in order to begin to understand what is happening or we will literally go to our self-manufactured extinction still complaining about 'cruel nature'. Technology is the problem. Perhaps technology can be the solution too, but it will take a deep identity change in the hand that wields it. — unenlightened
So it may be that what we are is so fragile that it can't adapt to even moderate change. There are a lot of flora and fauna like that. — frank
So it isn't just one thing (like rising global temperatures) that could upset the applecart. It's negative synergism. — Bitter Crank
I don't think it's a sin to believe that technology gives us the opportunity to live better lives. I'm very grateful that when I get ill I can go to a doctor, that we can clean stuff to reduce disease, but what I'm most grateful for is the kind of thinking and tinkering that leads to such cumulative betterment. Lives are longer now than ever, so I'll remain optimistic that there is a place for scalpels, microscopes, soap and antibiotics in Eden, and that there's no place in it for cholera and tuberculosis. — fdrake
No big tech, just good governance and hygiene.Guinea worm disease is set to become the second human disease in history, after smallpox, to be eradicated. It will be the first parasitic disease to be eradicated and the first disease to be eradicated without the use of a vaccine or medicine.
And then one fine century someone will start digging in the right place to find us, and they'll be soooo amazed. — frank
We are headed for extinction. It's just a question of when. And this is my question for you: what does it mean to accept that? — frank
clean air, good animal husbandry will do most of the work against tuberculosis. — unenlightened
It's ironic really the scientific and rational education I have been subjected to in this thread in defence of the culture of mass destruction and extinction. As though it is all made up, or if not made up, then unimportant, or if important, easily fixable, or if not fixable, a price worth paying, or if not worth paying... — unenlightened
What gave you the impression that I was defending it? — fdrake
To a large extent, I'm trying on a perspective. As if, we are at the end of something, that might be civilisation, or humanity, or a particular scientistic ideology, as if we (I) realise too late or almost too late that all this (unspecified but sort of understood) is already dead. So that most of our conversations should they survive will look to 'them' like the religious arguments of the scholastics, complex, futile dated, irrelevant. I'm not committed to anything more than an obituary of failed philosophies in all this.the emphasis you are placing on seeing nature as neither reserve nor enemy is fully consistent with a perspective that sees both as detrimental to human welfare, while still using human welfare as a system of valuation for our collective actions and attitudes towards nature. In essence, you are selling a promise to improve our chances of survival and development by stopping the rape of nature. — fdrake
I'm only quoting you because you're the only one talking about the topic. I don't mean to accuse you, and I'm not really even addressing you more than the rest of the world, and mostly myself. — unenlightened
To a large extent, I'm trying on a perspective. As if, we are at the end of something, that might be civilisation, or humanity, or a particular scientistic ideology, as if we (I) realise too late or almost too late that all this (unspecified but sort of understood) is already dead. So that most of our conversations should they survive will look to 'them' like the religious arguments of the scholastics, complex, futile dated, irrelevant. I'm not committed to anything more than an obituary of failed philosophies in all this. — unenlightened
There must be a mathematics of control systems, but it probably involves strange attractors and does my head in. — unenlightened
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