Systems are currently primarily run by competitive organizations. Competition creates redundancy, is slow and wastes resources on idea protection, advertisement, and more. Competition also requires secrecy which blocks progress and causes lost opportunities and ideas. Patents and copyrights further limit speed and the potential for mass input of ideas. Collaboration between the people with the greatest expertise does not happen unless they are hired by the same project.
"If they do not legislate a one-child policy, then starvation and war will result in the required population reduction anyway."
>So...you DO recommend rolling the tanks in to force them to reduce their population? You just want someone else to give the order, right?
"Why would someone else have to tell Nigeria what to do? Couldn't they figure it out for themselves?"
>Haha, are you serious? I think you actually are serious, but that just makes it funnier. If you're going to come down on me for being stupid enough to rely on a magical new technology to cure our problems then I get to come down on you for being stupid enough to rely on a magical new philosophy to cure our problems. You're hardly the first person in history to say, "Man why can't we all just get along?" and you won't be the last. At least my stupid idea relies on a steadily increasing level of technology. Yours relies on the idea that humans will finally stop acting the same way they've always acted.
"I do not think it is true that "civilization guarantees the eventual failure of civilization.""
>Can you give me an example of a civilization that has never disappeared?
I volunteered to end the conversation. You chose to continue interacting with a person who obviously thinks differently. Stop whining.
"I am also saying [war/starvation] is highly undesirable, so that birth control is the preferable option."
>Which is great. Thanks for saving the day Captain Obvious. You haven't yet explained how you are going to get the population of Nigeria to voluntarily adopt a one-child policy. I can't think of a way. I've never heard of anyone else thinking of a way. So, YOU need to explain how that's going to happen. Only then can your "solution" be considered anything greater than wishful thinking.
"Suggesting that communities can make decisions for themselves is not the same thing as suggesting that "everyone just get along." I suggested that communities can make decisions for themselves."
>But your "solution" hinges on convincing those communities to make the decision you know they SHOULD make. Because you're rational and they aren't. How are you going to do that? How are you going to break people up into small enough groups that they start to act rationally? Or whatever your idea is...I wouldn't want to strawman you.
"No, my idea does not rely on any change in human nature whatsoever. It only appears this way to someone whose idea of human nature is derived solely from Western expansionist cultures which have existed for less than a few hundred years."
>What was that you were saying about charity? Anywho, that would have been a great place to rebutt my understanding of how human nature helps your idea work. you know, since I have "no idea" what you're actually saying.
"You wanted to imply that the cause of civilization collapsing is always due to civilization itself (I don't see how else your statement could be interpreted). This simply does not follow from the observation that all civilizations eventually collapse. "
>No I didn't. I merely observed that all civilizations collapse. That is all. Full stop. No implication as to a common cause.
"Now you're either being dishonest or you've simply forgotten what it is you said. You said "civilization guarantees the eventual failure of civilization." That's a direct quote. "
>Yeah. That's a tautology. If "all civilizations collapse" then the existence of a civilization guarantees a collapse. It's a simple logical restatement; I merely reversed the parts.
"I never claimed that they weren't rational... "
>Then I must really not be following anything you've said. I thought your thesis was that irrational decisions, caused by large groups, were leading us straight towards resource scarcity and collapse. Where did I go wrong?
"My solution doesn't hinge on convincing anyone of anything."
>Really? Cuz just a few sentences later you said, "People can either be rational and recognize that these conditions are necessary, or they can ignore them and perish." I was under the impression that you were proposing a "solution" to our resource scarcity problem, which was convincing all the irrational people to be rational and voluntarily limit their population and resource use. What about that is incorrect?
Okay, but you could have just said "all civilizations collapse" and avoid this confusion. But, I also addressed this claim. Even if all civilizations in the past have collapsed this does not provide support for the deduction "therefore, all civilizations collapse." From the fact that "all civilization in the past have collapsed" the most you can do is infer that all civilizations collapse, using induction. An inductive inference provides no guarantee. So, I still say that is is not necessarily true that all civilizations collapse.
">Then I must really not be following anything you've said. I
thought your thesis was that irrational decisions, caused by large
groups, were leading us straight towards resource scarcity and collapse.
Where did I go wrong?"
A human being is still "rational" in one sense even if they are acting irrational at the moment, because "rationality" is part of the essence of a human being. A human is a thing with rationality. Or, to be more precise, a human being is a thing with the capacity for rationality. So when I said that "people are rational" I meant that people have the capacity for rationality, not that they use this capacity at all times or that their behavior can always be described as rational.
I do think that group size is a determining factor influencing people's ability to use their capacity for rationality. Commentators throughout history have noticed that as a group becomes larger, rationality and democracy suffer.
"I was under the impression that you were proposing a "solution" to our
resource scarcity problem, which was convincing all the irrational
people to be rational and voluntarily limit their population and
resource use. What about that is incorrect?"
I'm not even proposing a solution, really. Just pointing out necessary conditions for sustainability. I think that our empire will collapse and society will be reset back to small groups, just as has occurred several times throughout the history of Western Civilization. I don't see any way of avoiding this at this point - maybe if we had taken the advice of scientists in the 60's and 70's who warned us of limits to growth, we could have avoided collapse, but I think it's too late now. Maybe, after such a catastrophic collapse, people will learn the reasons for collapse and will avoid repeating the same mistakes. I don't expect that all or even most groups will do this, but those that survive over the long-term will have to. I'm not proposing any specific solution. I'm pointing out reasons for collapse and necessary conditions of sustainability. From there, people may or may not come up with their own solutions. The more we continue on our current path, the worse the eventual collapse will be. We can take steps now to engineer a "soft landing."
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