Dubious wrote:The biosphere is responsible for the existence of every organic entity which includes parasites according to its definition. Where else is it supposed to come from?
Organisms do not grow their own parasites - the eggs come from outside.
Dubious wrote:Cancers as a process are very organized and adept in killing its host which is the reason it hasn't yet been defeated. How many times have humans been compared to a virus or a cancer since the behaviour of humans fit the description almost perfectly.
Cancers are amorphous blobs that only kill because they grow in an uncontrolled way and thus interfere with ordered systems, but they have relatively very little organisaion. A cancer lacks that organisation in the same way as bacterial colonies lack the coordination of organisms.
There is nothing in a cancer (or parasite) that suggests greater concentrations of organisation. That only occurs with metamorphosis.
Dubious wrote:Absolutely it can thrive without us. Is there any serious doubt in your mind about this? Since when have we become its insurance policy?
Is your immune system an insurance policy? Biology responds to circumstances.
Dubious wrote:All very nice but in the meantime let's not screw-up this one before we get to the others. It remains supremely uncertain whether your noble destiny for the human race has any chance of working out but one thing is for sure, we're HERE in the meantime. Screw that up and you can park this wonderful Ray Kurzweil dream in the nearest landfill.
I may well be a more staunch and long-term environmentalist than you, having had "green sympathies" some decades before the ideas became popular. Back then people called you a hippie if you held those views.
You misread me profoundly. I am all for slowing the rate of the "Holocene Extinction Event" as much as possible. However, that doesn't mean I should not accept the reality - and the reality is that Earth's terrestrial biology is in its last stages of life, humans or not. Either we carry it on or it all dies in less than a billion years.
If that's the case there is still some hope of panspermia because some microbes floating through space will find a new watery home. However, billions of years of organisation will be lost to the solar system, and humans and their descendants have the potential to greatly improve the biosphere's chances of spreading its seeds elsewhere.
Also, bear in mind that our radio signals, light and space junk are advertising our presence to the cosmos. If there is intelligent life elsewhere with long distance capabilities, it will surely send drones to collect biological material.
Dubious wrote:I believe I mentioned ..."We" are only a very tiny segment in the theme park of planet Earth...
I see, you're only saying we are part of the biosphere, not all of it. Obvious enough.
My point was and is: what humans are doing is what the biosphere is doing and, yes, it's obviously doing many other things too. We might only be a part of it but we make up the largest biomoass of large animals in Earth's history, we have terraformed much of the planet, created numerous new organisms via genetic manipulation and may even in the process of creating technological intelligence. And, yes, we are responsible for the extinction event currently in train. The biosphere is doing it to itself - breaking down established systems and replacing them with systems capable of becoming far more complex.
Dubious wrote:Every empowered species creates its own complications. The question becomes how empowered are they to control it?
Seemingly not very at this stage.
Dubious wrote:Your analogy makes no sense at all, but, NO, I DON'T WANT US ALL DEAD!
If humans are akin to parasites (and somehow also cancer?) would that be something you want to keep alive? Are we inclined to save and preserve tapeworms in our gut or cancerous masses in our organs?
Sure, you - and almost everyone who's not corrupt or blinkered - would like to see more restraint, less greed, less waste, more consideration for natural systems and to generally slow our impacts to allow for sustainability. In my experience, slow growth is more grounded and sustainable growth, so I am strongly in favour of conservation efforts, especially of systems (like the Amazon).
I do think the most likely explanation is that the biosphere is metamorphosing rather than all this self-loathing parasite/cancer tosh. I am all in favour of slowing the changes as much as possible, to focus much harder hard on renewable energy, recycling, reusing, to generally preserve as much as possible and to more deeply consider the plights of other species.
What for? So animals can bumble along just like "the good old days"- until an asteroid or the Sun gets them?
Dubious wrote:There were many more animals that bumbled along in the “good old days” than exist now. We've been very prolific in culling the animal population throughout the ages. A power equivalent to an asteroid has hit them already. We call it the human race. In the nature of things as confirmed by geology and paleontology they would have waited eons longer and it would have been more sudden.
Actually, there's huge numbers of large animals on the Earth, just that an increasing percentage are intelligent hominids. You yourself have the impact of a very small asteroid, as does the family of magpies that sometimes visit my garden. Which size asteroid do you suggest humans are akin to? There are asteroids large enough to bring on a catastrophe akin to the Permian (although this was probably not caused by asteroids). Informed observers believe the Holocene extinction event will be a very long way from some of the worst extinctions:
https://cosmosmagazine.com/earth-scienc ... xtinctions
If in the next few million years humans manage to deflect even one monster asteroid we will have "paid our way". It's early days yet.
Dubious wrote:What are you talking about If we regressed to a point that you wanted and the whole litany of allegations that were never made? Why such nonsensical assertions that somehow you inferred and blame me for?
No, that's what YOU have been advocating - regression - railing against the destructiveness of modern civilisation, saying how much better off the Earth would be without humans. You are focused on the negative and persistently ignore the positives of humanity. Metamorphosis hurts, just as any change does.
Dubious wrote:What I emphasized is that unless we get a whole new perspective on behavior on this planet moving forward may be far less of a priority than damage control. Being the über intelligent creatures we believe we are, if we can't manage that then go ahead and croak. It's no loss to the planet and/or surroundings. Stripped of any stupid idealism, is there any doubt about that? If humans are to be creatures of destiny then that process should have been started long before now. Unfortunately, even NOW is not a promising catalyst for the future you envision.
You effectively accused me of a straw man when I assumed you wanted us to return to a simpler time. Maybe fair. It looked like you were advocating for regression and I do think there are mixed messages from you there.
I will now call you out on your straw man here. You paint me as one not interested in humans trying to alleviate environmental damage. I have been interested in environmentalism for decades, given the Green my vote or a high preference for about 30 years, and been a keen recycler, and so forth for about that long.
Do you think I'm looking forward to all this? That I like it? Of course not. I prefer the status quo as much as any animal that prefers the conditions to which it was adapted. Trouble is, reality doesn't stand still to hold desirable snapshots for us. Change is happening. Humans are major agents of change and we are careering towards the unknown without control, essentially following the scripts of physics and biology to their logical conclusions, given the circumstances.
The way I'm seeing it, billionaires and their offsiders seem most likely to carry on humanity's projects as the rest of us fall away (survival of fittest). Do I like that vision? Do I want the greedy and selfish to "win"? Nope, although I suspect that high concentrations of wealth a power are capable of achieving more than diffuse ones, even if amoral. My logic is at odds with my value systems here. I hold out some hope that surviving billionaires/helpers and their next generations will be chastened by the harm they caused and grow a heart.
Earth is turning into Venus in a billion years' time anyway.
Dubious wrote:True but that doesn't mean we should attempt a head start on the process if we aspire to the kind of future you mention.
We don't have to aspire. It's happening anyway. Significant environmental restoration efforts will continue to be attempted and our descendants should have far greater capabilities in this area, which is starting to boom. The future is not very predictable because of the novel interaction between natural systems and technological capability, our attempts at steering controls, and unexpected results, eg. plants growing faster with more carbon in the air. (Note: they aren't growing anywhere near fast enough for sustainability, though). Another interesting notion is that we are not far from being due for an ice ace. The overall future of environment and climate is uncertain, although the effects of heating this century (in short time spans) is far more predictable.
I think of humans as the biosphere's reproductive organs.
Dubious wrote:Must say a bizarre thought indeed. This would infer humans as being the creators of everything contained in the biosphere. In fact as it's reproductive organs we actually become the biosphere!
Bizarre for life to have reproductive capability?
I suspect that things may be far more bizarre still! What is the core complaint everyone has? That biology is increasingly being turned either into geology, or being pushed into simpler forms, thus closer to the original "nonliving" geology that preceded biology on Earth. Meanwhile humans are creating geological intelligence. Many informed observers think it likely that this geological intelligence - AI - will either feature as a permanent augmentation or take us over.
It's a weird situation. We are effectively in the early process of becoming more geological - less carbon and more silicon. What might that mean in terms of the way natural systems evolve and behave?
Most of us living in this time and much of what we love and value are doomed. The next hundred years will see tragedy on an unprecedented scale. We have been through the best of times and we are on a sharp downhill run - or at least most of us are. All we can aim for is harm minimisation.
In terms of the thread's question - "what really matters?" - harm minimisation must feature, applying to every area of life. The acceptance that "stuff happens" and attempts to alleviate that harm rather than adopting dangerous "magic bullet solutions", with the deluded notion of solving problems "once and for all", eg. war on drugs, war on terror, war on gangs, war on crime.
If the biosphere is going to persist after the Sun's expansion then humanity may well play a major role, at least greatly improving the chances of Earth-induced panspermia elsewhere. Life has a drive to persist and explores all possible options like water explores the cracks in pavement (hardy surprising since life is largely water).
Dubious wrote:Life certainly has a drive to persist but this refers to life as a whole in its complete manifestation not some infinitesimal part whatever be its shape or form in which its individual instances turn on and off like fireflies...we being merely one of those instances.
Actually, life is frequently content to lose its whole so as to to allow infinitesimal parts of it to persist. That is the reproductive process in a nutshell. Numerous life forms commit hari kuri so as to reproduce.