No! As I said earlier, we have to act in anticipation of the threat. Climate change will disrupt the economy - undermining our ability to address it. I can show that revolutions in energy production have preceded every great leap forward for human civilization. Yet rather than leap forward, the prevailing plan seems to be to back down - tax this, stop that, pay more, have less. It will not work. — counterpunch
I am science oriented, and in those terms - it follows from the second law of thermodynamics that we need more energy, not less. To maintain any ordered state requires the expenditure of energy. The world could develop that energy from magma - and; do you not see the advantage of attacking the problem from the supply side - it would not be necessary to stop this, tax that, pay more and have less - to address climate change. All the social, political and economic turmoil a 'limits to resources' green approach implies can be sidestepped; because in fact, resources are a function of the energy available to create them, and the technology exists to capture carbon, desalinate, irrigate, recycle. We could be much wealthier in future - and free from guilt by design. — counterpunch
My position is simple: Humanity, as a species, is not something I consider worth saving in it's current state. — Book273
The fatal flaw in all prognostication is the assumption you know what the critical issues (to be confronted) will be. If you look back into history, you will see that this rarely (if ever) happens, and when it does, it's by mere chance. What happened to the ice age predicted in the 70's or any of the other absurd predictions that have been made in the last 50 years? — synthesis
This is why all the sages of the past, school the people to concentrate efforts on the present and let the future take care of itself. — synthesis
Like I've mentioned previously, energy is the least of our worries. There is unlimited energy available. It's just a matter of reducing the cost which is what capitalism does better than anything else. And wealth is one thing, but man will never be guilt-free. When yo think about it, guilt might be the only thing there is more of in this world than energy! — synthesis
It's a peculiarity of philosophy, I suspect, accustomed to appeal to the dustiest tome, to fail to recognize that science moves forward as a body of knowledge from a flurry of hypotheses toward more certain knowledge over time - such that "absurd predictions" later disproven as we falsify possibilities to zero in on knowledge, is exactly what we should expect to see. — counterpunch
Although Science does move, I believe a more accurate GPS might demonstrate that the movement is lateral. It (Science) simply goes from one absurd position to the next. The difference is the former has fallen from grace whereas the later is now all the rage (a process that can go on forever). — synthesis
the "current state" the world is in! It shouldn't have been. — counterpunch
I am assuming that is a rhetorical question? :) You need to take a step back and see this in its entirety. You seem overly preoccupied with saving everybody while failing to appreciate the transient nature of all things knowable. — synthesis
Again, I see what is. We are not worth saving, period. If things had been different...blah, blah, blah, pointless discussion. If I weren't me and if we weren't us has no value, we are what we are, and I don't think we are worth saving.
Your approach suggests that we are somehow "all wrong" due to the influence of the church, however, I suggest that far before the church intervened in anything, we were already "wrong". Welcome to humanity, we kinda suck. — Book273
Synthesis, With all due respect further discussion is pointless. — counterpunch
I understand what you are saying, but I choose to believe something else. — synthesis
What could be worse than having the pressure of having the rest of humanity believe that you were the one who figured it out! — synthesis
What could be worse than having the pressure of having the rest of humanity believe that you were the one who figured it out!
— synthesis
I've thought about it, and these are my thoughts. More than that I cannot say. I can explain my reasons for believing what I believe, and my philosophy points to something external to me. My thoughts are either interesting to others, or they're not - but don't imagine they are a hair shirt to me. I'm hopeful in face of it all because, from what I find I must accept, it's possible to deduce a strong rationale for a clear plan of action to secure a prosperous sustainable future, consistent with maintaining freedom! Hurray! — counterpunch
Just the same, that doesn't mean that I have to buy into your reality (even though you think it is airtight). — synthesis
I do not agree with your assessment of the state and nature of knowledge. — counterpunch
Technology based on scientific principles - works within a causal reality, and what is more the closer the technology approximates the scientific principle, the better the technology works. — counterpunch
Recognizing the truth value of science provides the rationale to apply technology as suggested by a scientific understanding of reality, and so - you see why I am forced to dismiss your subjectivist, relativist, skeptical, nihilistic - rejection of truth and/or morality. — counterpunch
It's not that I care particularly what you choose to believe, but that my approach to sustainability is based on the existence of an objective reality - of which we are reliably able to establish valid knowledge. — counterpunch
What case can you make that man has any really grasp of reality? That can man understand anything? Remember, just because you can make something work does not mean that you have any real understanding. — synthesis
If you believe that to be the case, how can explain the fact that I have been able to be quite successful professionally? — synthesis
What I do takes a great deal of experience and skill. How would that be possible? — synthesis
Just consider the possibility that there might be other ways to go about doing things. — synthesis
Okay, if you'll consider the possibility that in theory, there is a scientifically rational, systematic application of technology that is the right way to go about a prosperous sustainable future - we might agree to differ on what we each mean by truth. — counterpunch
For me, truth is demonstrated by a functional relationship between knowledge, action and consequence. It's true because it works! — counterpunch
For you, it is omniscience or idiocy! — counterpunch
Now we get to the heart of the matter. You say that truth is demonstrated by a "functional relationship" between knowledge, action, and consequence. You go on to say, it's true because it works. So, how is this different from those in the past who believed that it was the gods that made things work. Wasn't their rationale just as valid? There existed a solid relationship between knowledge, action, and consequence. Made perfect sense to them. And it was true (to them) because it worked! — synthesis
Not at all. The Truth is present. We simply cannot appreciate it. What we do is use our primordial intellect to guess and then refine those guesses over time. Wouldn't it make sense to take such into account? — synthesis
For real? Nothing in science that is thought to be true today will be in 500 years, so how is that "real?" This is not to say that I cannot use science, but you have to take into account that this knowledge is transient. Taking this position allows, (no, insists) that the individual consider other possibilities (in my situation, alternative medical treatments) critical to those who strive to push the frontiers of current practices.Scientific principles explain how things work for real. Is that not miraculous? — counterpunch
Okay, so now you've switched to reality as a Platonic ideal argument against science as truth. But here's your problem; science is a practical perspective on truth. It works insofar as knowledge corresponds to reality, so your distant idealism is false in practice. Reality exists, we experience it, and can form generalisable laws about how it works - and then apply those laws to create technologies that function. — counterpunch
Nothing in science that is thought to be true today will be in 500 years — synthesis
Reality worked the same way 500 years ago as it does today. — counterpunch
Reality (at any particular moment) NEVER changes. It is what it is. It is our thinking that changes as we are always attempting to catch-up with moments only visible in the rear-view mirror. — synthesis
Ironic, given that you've just been telling me how things will be in 500 years! How is that possible? — counterpunch
Keep in mind that the biggest mistake people make (vis a vis other people) is assuming that their reality is shared (or worse, that it's universal). Then, they spend the rest of their lives attempting to convince everybody else that this is the case. — synthesis
Reality (at any particular moment) NEVER changes. It is what it is. — synthesis
You are staying within a specific frame of reference and saying this is the truth. I. OTOH, stray from the same and suggest that your truth very narrow and that there are as many potential truths as there are moments in time. — synthesis
Reality is consistent and universal in nature on the macroscopic, causal scale we inhabit. Therefore, what is scientifically true, is true for me and you, and everyone else the same. — counterpunch
Debate about the precise nature of truth is somewhat of an aside; yet integral to the question of where we place our trust in face of the impending existential crisis. — counterpunch
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