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Larry Hogue's avatar

The bit about physicists surprised me, but I guess it shouldn't have!

When Shakespeare's plays were first performed, they didn't need a script for every actor, and producing that many scripts would have been too time-consuming. So actors would read the script once and know their parts. The same with audiences: they'd go home from Romeo and Juliet able to repeat vast stretches of dialogue and the monologues. The thing that changed that: printing presses able to cheaply produce books and plays.

It's the same with all technology, starting with shoes and the wheel (but probably excluding fire). It just makes us weaker. Wear shoes long enough and you won't be able to go barefoot. Ride everywhere in a cart and you'll lose your ability to walk very far.

The tradeoffs for most technologies were "worth it" in some sense, but we have gotten (or are getting to) the point where that's no longer the case.

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Geoffrey Deihl's avatar

The next leap for humanity needs to be behavioral and spiritual, one of wisdom. Clearly, we're not there. The science we have achieved, even if it has been appropriated for meaningless consumer endeavors and become stagnant, has been enough to create the 6th Great Extinction, which could very well include us. Perhaps if we hadn't discovered fossil fuels, we could have reached a better potential. Hard to say, we were violent before technology as well.

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