Have you experienced this?but perhaps the edges of fiction and reality are becoming more blurry day by day. — Jack Cummins
there was a first only, and five others for goodness sake, and life not only went on but continued (and even if you say we weren't here, that's even more toward my point) and got better. I'm not sure what the huge deal is really. — Outlander
I doubt this, there is a phenomenon amongst climate scientists, in which they shy away from saying anything conclusive, or alarmist, because they risk being dragged into a media circus. So they don't often give their interpretation of the data and leave such conclusions to others.Right, but just focus for a second on this: the scientific community does not support the conclusion that we're 'presiding over a mass extinction event'
I would question this "truth" and Also I don't see the phenomenon you refer to of protesters over exaggerating the issue. Perhaps this is how it is in the US, but the rest of the Western countries have already passed beyond this point and the crisis is accepted for what it is.They walk away before you can even present the truth to them, as if they dont want their belief threatened.
doubt this, there is a phenomenon amongst climate scientists, in which they shy away from saying anything conclusive, or alarmist, because they risk being dragged into a media circus. — Punshhh
would question this "truth" — Punshhh
But I am on crash course collision with the apocalypse and a phase I borrow from Marilyn Manson's autobiography is the idea of a 'personal apocalypse.' — Jack Cummins
From a certain point of view change is the death of something. — frank
This is fairly possible because I am influenced by theosophy, especially Blavatsky and Alice Bailey.
But, in general, collapse of some kind may be followed by a new beginning. — Jack Cummins
The demise you refer to is of a whole different order of magnitude to what Frank is talking about. The planet will be entirely extinguished.From the theosophical perspective, we are presently in the fifth kaliyuga, which would mean the demise and dissolution of the fifth planetary sphere. So no, not the sixth mass extinction from that point of view.
This is unfortunate, I had thought of scaling this edifice, philosophically, but eventually realised that the gulf is to wide to span. Particularly as philosophy seems to be going in the direction of post modernism. Theosophy is an exercise in translating Hindu spiritualism into something which can be grasped by the West. As such it is orthonogal to the edifice of Western philosophy.Unfortunately, from a purely philosophical perspective it is hyper-speculative with a narrow focus on metaphysics. It hardly touches on epistemology and ethics, which is why it remains conspicuously absent in philosophical circles.
I wouldn't use the words "secretly confident", rather, secretly worried. I say this because the scientists who became embroiled in the media circus around claims by climate change skeptics, that the scientists were massaging the statistics on the rate of predicted global warming. Are from my local University, The University of East Anglia, UK.So youre saying that the scientific community is secretly confident that we're in a mass extinction? What makes you believe this?
Does this mean that one (of many) solutions to another extinction level event (ELE) is to improve flight technology [vide The Vulture (Spiderman) or Falcon (Avengers)]? — Agent Smith
Entirely depends on the type of ELE. — Hermeticus
How? All ELEs boil down to famine-conditions; flight capability (enhanced mobility) would be a big asset, would mean the difference between life ans death. — Agent Smith
If you go internet surfing to discover the scientific answer to this question, you're bound to come across this article. In it, the authors state, "Life has now entered a sixth mass extinction." The footnotes for that statement refer to three articles. In one case, the author is referring to an article he himself wrote. A second reference is to the popular Barnosky article which does not conclude that we are in a mass extinction event, but that it's possible in the next 300 years. The third reference is an article by Pimm, which also does not conclude that we are in a sixth mass extinction event. In short, this is poor science.
This article delivers the opinion of Doug Erwin, a paleontologist and expert in mass extinctions. He makes a couple of observations:
1. We aren't in a mass extinction now, though it's possible that we could enter one in the future
2. People who announce that we're in a mass extinction may think they're doing their cause a favor, but in fact, they're actually presenting a no-win scenario. No action would make any difference. So if they're trying to encourage no action, they've chosen the right strategy. — frank
If you want to say that human activity is associated with extinction or near extinction of a large number of species all over the world, you've got science on your side.
If you want to say we're in a mass extinction, you don't — frank
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