| ▲ | arjunchint 5 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
there are no guarantees in life, can look up any random day and see a meteor streaking across the sky and realize that this is the end regardless of "sociopolitical structures". All that matters is sociotechnological progress to be able to progress further enough to overcome these tests of existence. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | timschmidt 4 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> look up any random day and see a meteor streaking across the sky That's happened rather more times in Earth's history than most folks are comfortable admitting. Tunguska would have leveled any major metropolitan city on the planet. I still think an impact is one of the more likely initiators of the Younger Dryas abrupt cooling and worldwide ~100M sealevel rise ~12,000 years ago. Conspicuously aligned with the oldest surviving traces of city living, agriculture, etc. It's increasingly accepted that a large portion of human history is 100M underwater on the continental shelves, estuaries, and other coastal areas where humans would have liked to live. | |||||||||||||||||
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