UndercoverElephant wrote: ↑22 Jan 2023, 09:19
johnny wrote: ↑22 Jan 2023, 00:28
There are no facts in the future.
There are conditional facts.
Oh, you are going to need to elaborate on that one. Assuming we both accept that a fact is a mutually agreeable thing, historical event, definition, equation, whatever, then a fact is a fact, and conditional on nothing other than it being known and agreed to.
And you, being no more precognitive on a grand scale then I am, can ONLY do what everyone else can, which is couch things in terms of probabilities. Any probability distribution of future events must also include that incoming GRB sterilizing the planet. And something other than what any of us can even imagine perhaps. The Vulcans show up and congratulate us on surviving our civilizations infancy and help us out with our fusion issue perhaps.
UndercoverElephant wrote:
Either humans go extinct or humans end up back in balance with the global ecosystem, presumably after both have changed. Also: economic growth will eventually end. This is inevitable, so it is a fact about the future.
I do not agree with your either/or supposition, therefore it, and neither of the scenarios, are facts, conditional or otherwise. Let's hear it for Dyson Spheres!!! Catton outlined the other 6-7-8 times your conditional perspective might have looked reasonable to the species. Like peak oil...it looks reasonable...right up until it doesn't.
UndercoverElephant wrote:
You can no more be sure of a mass extinction than peak oilers could be of 20th century peak oilsin the same decade it was being claimed, and we've all seen how religiously that belief was defended.
OK, now I am wondering what your agenda is. We can be sure of a mass extinction
because it is already well underway.
Agenda? I love gabbing, and most people don't gab about even limited future scenarios, but doomers doing it seem quite common, so I hang out around doomer folks. It isn't as though BAU folks are thinking outside of any box, and while doomers are usually uni-directional in their thinking, at least it is something beyond BAU.
Humans are certainly offing many other species through their actions. From a human perspective...so what...as long as there are enough around to keep me in good barbeque. Also, as long as it seems to bother poor people mosty.
UndercoverElephant wrote:
It is the natural order. Nothing supernatural required.
That does NOT appear to be the perspective by folks as to what happened in the world coming out of WWII. That is the time period, as one example, that peak oilers keep pointing out trying to claim that it was supposed to be what the world looked like until peak oil started coming. Growth growth growth, living wages from a single middle class person, buying a home and car while mommy stayed home, etc etc. The good ol' days. So that appeared to be the natural order for the First Worlders for half a century. I imagine cycles of growth and economic malaise have happened before, therefore it seems unreasonable to just presume outright that things are only unidirectionl, in terms of the human condition. If true...we would never have invented agriculture. We would have had natural decline as Neanderthals and died off before we hit Cro-magnon.
UndercoverElephant wrote:
Humans as an apex predator have certainly been bad news for most other species on the planet. The meek inheriting the earth and all that I guess. But us meek humans do enjoy those other species at a barbeque.
Vegetarianism will not solve humanity's problems.
I didn't say it would. I implied that humans have been bad news for other species on the planet, and some of them make a great barbeque, the next implication being that our taste for great barbeque might have something to do with their demise.