The conclusions in those articles are, essentially, that we are not currently seeing a mass extinction event, but that there may be one over the next few hundred years. — Punshhh
Here in Minneapolis, the City Council's stated intention to shift substantial funding from the police department to social services hasn't been acting upon — Bitter Crank
The galaxy turns as it circles the great cosmic toilet bowl. It's just a matter of time. — Bitter Crank
Again this is reasonable, but this is where the problem lies. Is humanity going to stop? — Punshhh
Since extinction is a global-scale event, on a global timescale, if there is a mass extinction in the next few hundred years, then it seems reasonable to conclude we are in fact in a mass extinction already. — Pantagruel
We could try for intentional non-procreation. Give it a try! — schopenhauer1
read the article. He seems to be splitting hairs and is not saying that a "mass die-off" isn't happening. Only that it doesn't fit the classical pattern of a "mass extinction". — Pantagruel
Statistically, the number of species lost fits the profile of a mass-extinction. — Pantagruel
it doesn't follow the usual "pattern", that's likely because the human contribution is a novel element. — Pantagruel
If you want to say we're in a mass extinction, you don't. — frank
You're saying we're part of Gaia's efforts to engineer herself? — frank
If you want to say we're in a mass extinction, you don't.
— frank
According to one article. The suggested consensus I posted from the Smithsonian website is that it is at least an open question — Pantagruel
Thereabouts, yes. — TheMadFool
I look at it differently. If intentionality could be ascribed to nature, it's pinned all its hopes on humans. Humans are endowed with an intelligence that's, as far as we know, unprecedented in the history of life on Earth. — TheMadFool
If you want to say we're in a mass extinction, you don't.
— frank
According to one article. The suggested consensus I posted from the Smithsonian website is that it is at least an open question
— Pantagruel
In the face of the openness of the question, would you back down from claiming that we're in an extinction event? — frank
I read a science fiction story once that was from the point of view of a gaia-like organism. It was trippy. — frank
Fact imitating fiction? Possible, very possible. — TheMadFool
So call it what you like, numerically, statistically, species are dying off at an unprecedented rate. — Pantagruel
True. It's the psychology of apocalypticism that has me fascinated. Why do people grasp and believe that the situation is much worse than it actually is? — frank
We could try for intentional non-procreation. Give it a try! — schopenhauer1
No doubt about that. "Mass extinction event" has a particular scientific usage. I was focusing on scientific language. — frank
It's possible that religiously based apocalypse scenarios have migrated to the environmen — Bitter Crank
Would you agree that Marxism was a form of apocalypticism? — frank
I don't know. All you have to do is become immersed in nature for a few years and you cant miss the dispersed intentionality of the whole thing. I get why people think in terms of Gaia.
It occurs to me that misanthropy might be what I'm really wondering about.
Is it misanthropy that makes people go for the evil human vs innocent nature theme? Or is it a covert sadism? Maybe both — frank
Agreed. It's splitting hairs to think otherwise.Since extinction is a global-scale event, on a global timescale, if there is a mass extinction in the next few hundred years, then it seems reasonable to conclude we are in fact in a mass extinction already.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.