Clinton Huxley wrote:Blind groper wrote:The thing as I see it is that humanity has already solved a heap of problems that were supposed to cause widespread devastation.
Rachel Carson wrote "Silent Spring" (published 1963) describing how ecologically disastrous pesticides were going to cause widespread devastation. It did not happen because people learned to make less toxic and biodegradable alternatives.
Paul Ehrlich wrote "The Population Bomb" (published in 1968) describing how the growing population would exceed ability to produce food, causing massive death by starvation, during the 1970's. It did not happen because people learned to grow more food.
The Club of Rome wrote "The Limits to Growth (published in 1973) describing how we would run out of resources, including oil by the year 2000. It did not happen because people learned to find and extract more oil.
Other predictions included Y2K, nuclear war, nuclear winter, ozone depletion, various ecological catastrophes etc. What they all have in common is that none of them happened because people learned to do what was needed to avoid the disaster.
So now we have Audley predicting disaster.......
This is kind of the argument David Deutsch makes in his latest book. He is an optimist - humans are good at causing problems but they are also good at solving them. He's kind of the Anti-Crumple.
The solving of most of these problems so far has involved more efficiently using/exploiting the resources available, but efficiency has a limit (in principle 100%, in practice always less than that) and the fact remains that we are an island in space, and our total resources have an absolute limit, and that without bringing population under control we
will one day hit this limit.
Sure there are more resources in space, and sure they are potentially exploitable. But even so without putting the brakes on our population growth in a massive way, it is inconceivable that we could possible bring resources to earth (or send people into space) at anything like the kind of rate needed to keep pace with our needs. To quote Dawkins in
The Selfish Gene,
...It is a simple logical truth that, short of mass emigration into space, with rockets taking off at the rate of several million per second, uncontrolled birth-rates are bound to lead to horribly increased death-rates...
I'm sorry but anyone who disputes the logic of this argument has to my mind moved beyond "optimism".
P.S. In case anyone get's the wrong idea, I
am very much in favour of the human colonisation of space, I just don't see it as the solution to our ecological problems on earth. It should be done anyway for it's own reasons.