Come on, you know the answer to this!Vitruvius wrote: ↑Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:33 am If COP 26 (in the UK in October/November) follows the same pattern as the previous 25 such meetings, the biggest achievement will be the group photo! 25 years they've been meeting to discuss climate change - and we are still doomed. Why?
This is not a rhetorical question. It needn't be so. Technologically speaking, we could solve climate change - and if we'd started 25 years ago with that aim in mind, we'd be on top of it by now. However, IMO - because the right have stuck their head in the sand on climate change, the narrative has been dominated by left wing thought, based in Malthusian pessimism and limits to resources, feeding into anti-capitalist politics, and as a consequence - it seems, the idea of solving climate change has never even been considered. Every measure assumes we must back down, tax this, stop that, have less and pay more. This is absolutely the wrong approach.
The Malthusian prophecy of mass starvation, resulting from the disparity between geometric population growth and arithmetic agricultural development, was overcome through the development of new technologies - tractors and fertilizers. Food production has outpaced population growth through the application of technology. Technology multiplies resources - so how can there be a limit to resources? Apply the right technologies, and there is no inherent limit.
The earth is a big ball of molten rock - containing a virtually limitless amount of energy. If we harnessed that energy, we could extract carbon from the atmosphere and sequester it, produce limitless amounts of clean electricity, hydrogen fuel, desalinate water to irrigate land, recycle - it's not that complicated. Technologically, we could solve climate change. Why haven't we?
Perhaps, but I don't think that pointing to the worst traits some human beings exhibit some of the time, explains anything.
And thereafter you really build up some hateful momentum, before concluding with this:SpheresOfBalance wrote: ↑Fri Aug 06, 2021 2:41 pmHumans first and foremost fear death, thus they are selfish in their want to survive. They are largely lazy, believing that ease of physical activity, like not hunting and gathering, will extend their lives. Humans have been so far removed from their reality in nature, due to the promise of money, the so called ease of living, that they can't see the forest for the trees, lazy, they don't want to.
In science I found a place where I don't hate the world so much. In evolutionary terms our species is doing pretty well - considering we started naked in the wild with nothing but sticks and stones, and have built all this - despite how imperfect, it's a miracle. Long may it continue; and to that end, science is key. Looking at things in those terms first, there's an obvious series of technologies we need to develop and deploy on a global scale starting with magma energy, used to power carbon sequestration, desalination, irrigation, recycling etc - and we could live sustainably, prosperously, long term. That wold be ideal. We are far from the ideal. Why? Is it because we are bad people? No! It's a non-ideal relationship to science - leading to a misapplication of technology, leading to climate change. Understanding this, and in face of the universal threat climate change poses, we could adopt a scientific rationale in common to justify that which is necessary to sustainability - starting by developing magma energy as a global good, and attacking the climate and ecological crisis from the supply side.SpheresOfBalance wrote: ↑Fri Aug 06, 2021 2:41 pmIf science doesn't lead the way, we're all lost in ignorance!

