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MouseInCathedral's avatar

Hi B!

The idea I keep coming back to in your writing is that, "we'll never have a civilization even close to this again."

Our fossil fuels took hundreds of millions of years to accumulate. The concentrations of usable ores might be a one-time bounty from the creation of the earth itself.

Given how much entropy we have created on this planet, after civilization collapses, will a society even on the level of Ancient Athens be possible? After all, as the Greeks themselves knew, it was only readily available iron and bronze ores that made their civilization possible.

The level we will fall to is terrifying. We had a bounty that took billions of years to create, and we squandered most of it in a giant party lasting a few decades. We use smartphones, and in generations we can count on our fingers, our descendents might be using tools of bone.

What a planet. What a universe...

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David B Lauterwasser's avatar

Outstanding essay, B, as always much respect for your work. Some much-needed "food for thought." All this quite nicely mirrors a few thoughts I myself have had before, although I could have never put it as eloquently as you did in the above.

I start to see a sort of convergence in worldviews happening, and I'm very pleased about this. The more people agree on where we're heading (plus a rough time frame regarding the *when*), the sooner we can start working towards & implementing *real* responses to the metacrisis - not just "more of the same" - en masse.

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