Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
Okay, really, while you are right on some points, you don't get others. Also, ''giving you such a speech''? This is the philosophers corner, and this is my opinion and mine alone, so why this agressive?
There was a subjunctive in that sentence... meaning it wasn't about you, as you didn't give me that speech (neither are you in my physical reach).
Incorrections in the above:
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
Quote
Yes we've advanced a lot (...) with our current status.
All of our advancements have always lead to misery for other species on this planet. It isn't our ongoing survival that I use as proof for my statement, it is the sheer speed at which our dominance has come to be and the footprint that it is leaving. You seem to take my examples to the extreme and assume because they haven't happened yet that it can't happen at all. Thousands of species prospering on our planet? The only species that are even remotely ''prospering'' are those that are able to take advantage of man's dominance (perhaps rats?) On a geological scale we are in a massive extinction period. That number alone doesn't say enough about it yet, as pretty much every large animal has been massively reduced in numbers and habitat and many have gone extinct. We have a different view on animal prosperity, clearly.
We are living beings. We need to take things if we wish to go on living. If we take something, then it means we take it
from somewhere. Every species does. If we advance, then that means we have to take
more. This is a logical result of our dominance. Technologies like Fusion and others are developed to
reduce this strain and if you haven't realized, we are in an age were we are finally beginning (I'm to cynical to say we succeed) to try to do this on a larger scale, so arguing what bad bad boys we've been before is comparing entirely different situations.
I can hardly take your examples to the extreme because they already ARE. There is no "sheer speed" to our development or an unusual footprint to our actions as we know no other species capable of the scale of our actions.
No, we don't have a different views on animal prosperity, we have different views on the nature of nature (no pun intended).
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
Nurture? What nurture? The entire fucking western food source is based on external input of nutrients and resources from artificial fertiliser and imported food for our meat production. The result is continent-wide soil and water degradation. The pieces of meat you eat are made possible by the nutrients being pulled from former rainforest soils leaving the barren. The reason for this because people think with their stomachs, dicks and pockets. Only after some science comes around and points out that it is actually bad to throw in massive amounts of fertiliser, will something change, and this results in the small movement of sustainable agriculture.
The "entire fucking western food source" is history of a couple decades compared to thousands of years of successful agriculture. And it's already in the process of (very) slowly being turned back to a sustainable situation. But hey, history is only allowed when it follows your point of view, isn't it?
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
This is not nurture, this is extreme exploitation which only restraint is the fact that we want to re-use the land the year after. In previous times, after a piece of land did not yield enough results, we would leave it and move on. Now, because we are with so many we have been forced to reuse the land we are growing our food on. Our own population has become the restraint.
Then what is nurture to you? Of course we take as much of as possible and nurture it just to the point of sustainability, that's the entire point. How should we nurture anything further? "Hey, species X looks so groovy, let's nurture it a bit further by miraculously getting the stuff needed for it out of nowhere and not at all taking it away from other species!". Yeah, because it isn't already bad enough that we
actively nurture ourselves.
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
This is the case in most countries where we have rid the land of nearly all of its forest, where there is no new land to expand on. My own country NL is the a prime example of this. But hey, what does humankind do in countries with a different status? Countries with remainders of ancient forest? Exactly, the same thing we did with pretty much all of our land, it hasn't changed at all and hell its worse because there is technology and an increased population increasing the pressures tenfold.
Yeah, I too wept when they harvested some thousand hectares of forest following modern recycling technology. I totally see your point how technology leads to destruc... no wait, I don't. Especially not when the issue at hand is a technology that means an
efficiency leap.
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
A big fallacy of the article I see now, is the black and white comparison of introduced animal extinction and that of our own. I would do better to compare it to any sort of crisis that would massively reduce the carrying capacity of our planet. The fear I express that the increase of our population is going too fast for humanity's intelligence to cope and adapt. The energy limit imposed by fossil fuels is the biggest one out there, and it would do good to serve as a restraint for stuff like energy reduction and with it reduction of EVERYTHING that is intricately linked with energy usage. It is the perfect restraint, just like the absence of new land was the restraint to start re-using land.
The big fallacy of your article is that 90% of what you say has nothing to do at all with Fusion and electrical energy. So perhaps you should try to actually explain how you think it relates to all the bad stuff.
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
Almost taking offence to my limited understanding of nuclear fusion, why? I did not say it would be better than oil in terms of actual energy production, did I? Its not the message about fusion power I was trying to convey but if the article does give that impression then that is my wrong. As far as I know, I only re-used what the physicists of NGC, BBC Horizon etc have been saying, e.g. Fusion as the energy source that can sustain our further development and their statements that they could make it viable as this replacement before any sort of problems arise with our fossil fuels. Look up BBC Horizon on Fusion Power and you will know what I am talking about. The guy doesn't think about whether anything else than this energy resource of his is needed to sustain us on this planet. If you think my views on fusion are wrong then why are the physicists such prophets of hope?
Your entire premise of Fusion leading to a population leap due it being, well, whatever you think it is, is based on wrong
assumptions. Yet you blame the possible extinction of humanity on it!
Yes, of course fusion power will sustain our further development if it becomes our main power source, that doesn't mean that development will say "screw you other factors, I have fusion!" and go into hyper mode. Key word
sustain. Our energy needs. Of course he doesn't think about anything else, because THAT'S NOT THE QUESTION! He's a physicist. He either assumes other people have a brain or he doesn't have one himself. We tend to be that way.
If you publish things like this, people will read it. And they will tell it to others and be convinced of it because obviously, someone had to write it, and they would never have someone publish something they don't know shit about, would they? Do you have any idea what damage you can do if you spread such faulty views? Do you realize what you
imply with your article?
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
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Fusion itself is unmeasurable more environment friendly than any alternative other than sticking our heads in the sand and dying. If people fuck up because they are people and like to fuck things up, then the problem is people, no fusion.
Fusion would allow us to expand further
I don't have a problem with the technology. It is as you say one of the best things that could happen to us if we can make it commercially viable. I only tried to point out that if it happens when we are not ready for it, it could lead to a disaster larger than would happen if we had to sustain ourselves on fossil fuels. A large part towards creating a global sustainable society is a global reduction of footprint. ''The environment'' seems to be everything that is the Global Warming hype, while lots of other environmental problems are in a more severe state and is also much more directly damaging. These problems do not have many direct solution and the cover it gets is laughably small. Every problem on this planet has to get bad and cause trouble before we actually do something about it (another great example, CFC and the ozone layer) and it is there that I draw the lines with human nature and evolution. Lots of climate-sceptists around for example have no idea about either side of the conflict yet side with the one that suits their situation best, namely the one that doesn't make them change things.
Yeah right, because as we screw up in so many places, having the chance not to screw up in one place is despicable as it would delude our view on what else we screw up. Totally see your point! How about we let a couple more scrupulous dicks ruin the rainforest so people will see how important it is to take action? How about we find a cure for AIDS and trash it so people realize what a danger it is? Fabulous plan!
You aren't qualified to predict what happens when we are not ready for it because you don't appear to understand what "it" is in the first place.
Shirou, on 10 Sep 2010, 15:20, said:
I am happy with this discussion because partly the reason I put this article up there is because I wrote it in one big swipe and usually when I do this, I bring up lots of controversial points and make correlations that are very thin. That doesn't mean you should treat it like you did in your first post, as that one was purely thread-degrading.
No, it was the response I'd give to you in a non-written conversation and one you will probably receive from many others that know a bit about the issue.
Edited by Golan, 10 September 2010 - 16:47.