"Grown-ups like to tell you where they were when President Kennedy was shot,
which they all know to the exact second.
It makes me allmost jealous,
like i should have something important enough to know where i was when it happened.
But i don't, yet.
The fact that it was a better time then, when people knew what they were supposed to do and how to make the world better.
Now nobody knows anything."
Don't most modern generations have some big event they can point to and say "that's where I was when I found out that _____ happened"?
I was 5 months old when Kennedy was shot. I might have been napping or having a diaper change or whatever else might have been going on. It's not like I'm ever going to know, since the only people who could ever have told me are all dead (I'm still getting used to that fact).
Another thing people tend to remember is where/how they found out about Reagan being shot (I was in school and heard it being passed around the library; by the end of the day everyone knew).
Oh, and Elvis? A friend was visiting and she was mopping the floor with me over a game of Monopoly, when her sister ran over to tell her that Elvis died. She was so upset that she went home immediately.
The death of Diana is another milestone a lot of people remember. My dad came into the house to tell me he'd heard it on the news.
There are a few threads here about 9/11. For most of us old enough to remember, that will be
the milestone where everyone remembers where they were and what they were doing when they found out.
Yeah I think so. Look at the history of man, no technological innovation really for thousands of years, then bam! pyramids and aquaducts and stuff. Why? Cus they organized into some sort of ordered society and had property. And then look at the progress from then up to the 20th century and beyond. I heard one stat that there has been more tech progress in the last 50 years than the rest of man's history combined. Not sure if I believe all that, but it's astounding. And it exists within these systems. Not saying the systems are perfect or anything.
No technological innovation? Baloney. The progression from basic rocks to scrapers, cutters, hand axes, arrows, spears, etc. is
huge. I saw a video once showing an anthropologist actually making some stone tools. It's not easy, and when it's done the result is a very precisely-crafted tool that (depending on what it is) is either highly specialized or can be used for a variety of tasks.
You know what invention made a huge difference during the Middle Ages? Stirrups. And how about the printing press? We're all arguing on this forum partly because somebody invented movable type that led to an explosion of literacy and the
expectation that people in general should be able to read.
Back in 1999, I was watching a 2-part documentary on A&E about the 100 most influential people of the past 1000 years. The individual who took the #1 spot was Johann Gutenberg, for the invention of the printing press. Widespread literacy is why this technological explosion of the 20th and 21st centuries was possible.
Huge progress was made in the living conditions in much of where the western world touched.
Can you go out to any river or lake and drink the water from it without boiling it or treating it in some way? I'd guess not. You sure can't do that in Alberta anymore. One of the legacies of the oil and gas industries here is that the fish from the Athabasca river have cancer. The Conservative politicians prattle about "remediation" but of course we know they never intended to bother with that. It took a huge fight just to get them to pay attention to the huge number of birds dying in the tailings ponds before they'd do something about it.
There's an abundance of food and medicines all around us, and plenty of water that we don't dare touch because due to "progress" it's been
poisoned.
Pretty much. We are a violent species and nature treats us with indifference, but even with relative peace in the world, 53 million or so die every year anyway. Pain is local, death is universal; the best people can do is to reduce what pain we can where we can.
Far too many treat nature with indifference. They don't seem to understand that we, as a species, are also part of nature. The universe isn't "out there." It's here as well, and we are part of it.
If you want to wax philosophical about the value of life and meaningless death, that would be fun. Start a thread; I'm all in.
Didn't somebody already do that?
The world a better place? “The world” has been steadily becoming a worse place since at least 1750 CE but more like ~8000 BCE. The experience of a limited few privileged humans? Sure, improving since the latter date. Very incrementally and more often than not at the expense of the experience of other humans.
Each person has to consult their own conscience, I guess. Yes, the water is undrinkable now, but medical advances over the past century mean that I'm alive now, as opposed to dead and what once would have meant that I'd go blind has become a case of having surgery, getting zapped with lasers (not a painless procedure, btw, or at least I found it quite painful), taking eyedrops several times a day for the next month, and taking whatever other steps the doctors recommend. One of those was that for the first week after surgery I wasn't allowed to let Maddy sleep with me.
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This is apparently how the world will likely look, by scientific extrapolation, in 2.25 billion years REGARDLESS of what humanity does with it.
Yep. Depressing, and this is why it's critical for humans to get off this planet. It's going to be uninhabitable long before those billions of years run out and the Sun expands. The last article I read estimates that we have about 600 million years left. Given the age of our solar system, that's not much time.
If that is your perspective, then again you are wrong. As an entity, the world is neutral to life and its existence.
The world is, what, 2 billion years old? And you want to look at a pretty random 8000 year period and say OMG! things are terrible. The things you complain about are only important to us. The Permian extinction wiped out 95% of all life. That was pretty bad for life, but the earth shook it off and moved on. And guess what, 250 million years later, life is thriving. You need to better define what you are talking about and how you are measuring things.
Your math is off by 2.5 billion years.