Yes, I should have mentioned the numerous predictions of nuclear holocaust. But it didn't happen, and it looks unlikely it will happen any time soon. (Human nature helped to prevent it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanislav_Petrov, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasiliy_Arkhipov, potentially http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... -interview.)UndercoverElephant wrote:People may well have said that about their civilisation - especially if they were citizens of the late Roman empire, for example. The question you are asking only really applies to the age of modern global civilisation going back about 200 years. I reckon you might have found people who believed that WWI was going to be the end of civilisation, and you would definately have done so during the Cuban missile crisis. But none of those examples are like what is being predicted today because they were all stoppable by humans just stopping and taking a step back. Wars eventually end. If nobody pressed the button, no nuclear weapons go off. The difference is that we are now facing an unavoidable man-made global catastrophe and it is far too late for anyone to do anything to stop it from happening. This is new.RogueMale wrote: It's worth asking whether there were people in past generations predicting the end of civilization (without any accompanying end of world) brought about by the actions of people. I can't think of any.
I'm not sure that TEOTWAWKI due to peak oil (or, if that doesn't get us, climate change) is unavoidable. But avoiding it seems very unlikely, given what we know about human behaviour. It requires lots of people to agree, rather than one person to disagree. One example which occurred to me recently: we could have had an abundant food source, edible without any processing, had our ancestors thought to selectively breed oak trees for the edibility of their acorns. But that takes centuries of foresight and those who take part in the process see no improvement during their lifetimes. So, it didn't happen.
Another, more worrying thing, for me anyway, is this: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg2 ... arity.html. This should be understood in the context of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Filter. We're past an apparently difficult evolutionary step which turned out to be so easy that it was reproducible in a laboratory. Incidentally, a form of sexual reproduction occurred spontaneously in Tierra (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tierra_%28 ... ulation%29). Life forms incorporated bits of virtual DNA from those which had recently died. Unless someone finds an evolutionary step which is really, really difficult, it looks increasingly likely that we haven't reached the Great Filter yet.
One good reason for taking predictions of doom seriously is that scientists (including even some astronomers) have very good reasons to believe that the end of civilization is imminent.