▲ | vlovich123 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Yes, humans have demonstrated quite the dominance for the world as it exists today. You’d agree that the ability to survive millions of years of changes to the worldwide ecosystem is quite different, no? For example, the world is experiencing quite a substantial desertification. Will humanity maintain its ability to build and survive at the current levels of consumption when food becomes significantly less available? | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | nlitened 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
My opinion is that no change of climate (beyond external impact) would be able to wipe humanity from the face of Earth. Even world-wide nuclear war would merely dent the total human population numbers for a few decades at most. Food production and logistics are getting more effective and more efficient over time, any hunger that has happened in the past century and will ever happen — was and will be entirely social/political in nature. We’re in no danger of food randomly disappearing naturally, as far as I understand. We are in danger of social changes though. Current civilizations might collapse, bringing hunger and death to hundreds of millions. | |||||||||||||||||
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