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Originally Posted by auroraglacialis
I guess I agree with a lot of this. I have that dilemma - I also like technology. I used to do a lot with computers and electronics and I like to use this forum and I like beeing able to visit foreign countries and fly a hangglider. Its fun and all. There seem to be technological solutions that are promising to solve one or another thing. Organic solar cells, carbon fibre materials and so on. the potential to do a lot of good is there, I am however still in doubt about true sustainability (meaning that the development can go on indefinitely). There even is technology that minimizes or even eliminates pollution for the one or another thing.
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So you agree with me? That is what I was saying
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Definitely sanity would suffer greatly from living in an increasingly artificial environment at least for me. I'd like to think, that all people are nature lovers deep inside, but I cannot be sure - many dont show it really and dig technology and artificial environment instead. Maybe I am part of a dying branch in evolution? I dont knoe. I feel a bit sad right now, so I hope my writings still make sense.
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I'm both at once. Always have been really. I couldn't live without either, I think you'll find that's true for the majority of people.
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Come on that is a techno fantasy.
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Like walking on the moon once was?
Or the discovery of DNA?
Or
travelling faster than a ridable animal?...
I just facepalmed IRL
I know you are opposed to any improvement, but that doesn't mean you can deny that it will happen (well, you can, but you're only saying it to yourself...)
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I am not talking SciFi here but about what is realistic within the timeframe that humanity and the earth has and that is a few decades.
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So am I

. Anyway, the times left for humans and the earth are very different.
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Of course i could fantasize about a distant techno-utopia in which humans live in nice villages, can get everything on demand and keep 90% of the world as a nature reserve out of good will. But that is about as likely as any of the futuristic dreams people in the past envisioned for our time from flying intelligent cars to space hotels and underwater cities.
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Nobody ever said that would be possible (talking about the first - ironically, the only reason we aren't exploring space is due to governments spending the money on wars for oil instead. Anyway, nobody wants to live underwater

, it's dangerous and the pressure causes all sorts of problems.)
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Besides, this is all based on HOPE only - one can hope that technology will exist to provide this, but it is not even possible yet to say if matter replication, fusion or faster than light travel is possible at all... To base the future on hope only is a bad bet, I would say.
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So is what you are wanting. You are basing all of yours on hope too, but just because it's YOUR hope, you think it's more likely than other situations.
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Well - my sig says something else. It says actually that I dont regard tools (which is my term for technologies that are not in themselves destructive) as a bad thing, but that people have "lost their way" in dealing with their inventiveness. And as long as that is so, I think increasing technology at least bears a strong potential for further destruction - and up to now that potential usually has always shown. And if the only other alternative is to go no-tech, than that would be my choice indeed - rather live a no-tech life than destruction of the earths ecology.
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Then go do that if you think you can. you'd be surised at what you'd miss. anyway, if you really want no technology, you would be far below how ANY human or humanoid has lived.
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So my question here was, if technological development in the near future is compatible with a continued existence of the natural world?
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Again, yes, simply because the main issue facing us is overpopulation.
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To argue against the dissappearance of technology with the "millions would die" argument is to be expected.
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Ironic you're the first person to mention it then.
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Also the argument that people would probably damage the ecology if collapse happens now.
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Yep. Because nobody can think of a way around it. there is no way 7 billion people can live one one small planet without the methods that have been developed over hundreds of years, no to mention the lack of scale - doing anything small-scale is less efficient - when this goes for food, it means far more space and resources are needed (as well as time per person)
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The question when it comes to these issues is, what will happen if things continue as they head now. My fear is, that if not something changes now, civilization is heading for a collapse anyways. Population will increase even more, pollution and global warming will increase and so damage to ecosystems will increase. And eventually either one of the technologies gets out of hand, or civilization reaches a point at which it starts to fail with the same consequences as you feared - just decades later with even less nature and landbase to turn to.
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I never said humans weren't likely to destroy themselves. Kind of sad really because we have the potential to solve all our problems if we worked together, but people don't want to.
I came to terms with humanity's eventual end a long time ago.
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The only way out of it is to hope and wish for a technological solution that creates a new utopia by actually solving all the problems. Do you think that this is a likely course? What would have to change to make it likely?
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Do you think that yours is any more likely?
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Well, I dont see it that way. For once, for a long time, there are plenty of resources available "in the open" for centuries or more - useable by recycling. I can just imagine how many metal knives and pots you could make from a scap car
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Nott as much as you might think - iron oxidises rapidly, and is then no use. Anyway, with no technology, how would you process the materials?
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- If a low use of resources happens, the resources would last way longer. And of course there is also the alternative of a no-resource way of life - this is basically "stone age" and I ask myself, if this maybe the only truely sustainable way in the end. (In the correct sense, meaning that it is a way of life that can go on indefinitely while a way of life that requires resources always eventually runs out of these resources)
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Something tells me that if you had less in life, you wouldn't think that way. If you DID have nothing and were struggling to survive. There's a reason humans didn't end up facing extinction, because despite being physically not that well adapted, they evolved a much greater intelligence and the ability adapt. Ironically, 'stone age' is not 'no technology' either.
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Well, this may surprise you but I love knowledge! I am a scientist after all, I studied the world, I studied resource geology and ecosystem science and physics, chemistry and biology. I experienced new place and that are nice experiences. I also see the impact that doing all this has on the very thing I wanted to see though and that deeply saddens me. By flying to Thailand in a Jet, I contribute to the destruction of the coral reefs I visited there. That cant work.
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Then why go?
Because you wanted to experience it. You wanted to appreciate the world. that can be done responsibly.
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In my sig I say, that the relationship of people towards the tools and towards other people has to change fundamentally. This is what you also say basically by saying you "blame the person using the tool". So the question is, how - realistically! - such a change could come about. This culture, this civilization fostered a mindset that I reckon makes it virtually impossible for the people living within that system to truely break out of it. Every technology developed within this system will eventually be abused and with increasingly powerful technologies, the potential (and often actual) damage is also increasing.
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Depends...
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Nanotechnology has the potential to turn the planets surface into a wasteland,
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So does
lighting a fire... Ironically, earlier you went on about me not being realistic, and now you're talking about nanotechnology? A realistic implementation is almost as far off as current expectations of future technology get.
We already have FAR greater capability than would be needed to wipe out everything... yet we haven't.
Nobody is stupid enough to what it means they would destroy themselves too.
Watch 'Wargames' sometime... you'd learn a lot from it. Somehow, in the 65 years we have had nuclear weapons, we've survived, despite all sorts of nutters having them from communists to religious nuts. Because nobody wants to ensure their own destruction.
People are genetically programmed to survive, nobody consciously acts against that.