Guest post by orgfarm
Part 1 of 3
Frequently the discussion here focuses on the concept of “collapse”. Generally, this is a reference to the “collapse of modern industrial civilization”. But what do we mean when we use those words? At a minimum, it’s “a rapid decrease in global human population and global economic activity”. Ok, easy to say, but what would that look like?
Now there’s the rub. Things too easily said are often too easily un-imagined, and are rarely followed to a logical endpoint. Why? Because analysis of the evidence often leads to uncomfortable, even frightening, conclusions we wish to avoid. Conclusions that tell us we might be wrong in thinking about a hopeful future.
We are far too glib when we say “collapse of civilization”. If one understood the profound implications of that phrase (and the recent science that supports it) it might give us pause and, in a sober and deliberate way, force us to describe what we mean. How would “collapse” unfold and what impact would it have on the nearly 10 billion humans living in 2040?
What follows is a scenario that appears increasingly likely as evidence for it accumulates from many academic disciplines. It’s a thought experiment to be sure, but one reasonably based on data, trends, and models from the last 60 years, and an awareness of the rise and fall of civilizations over the last 6000 years. It’s also a small attempt to open wider the “Overton Window” on this coming event that may mark the end of human history.
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