Discussion about this post

User's avatar
ThisOldMan's avatar

Fred Hoyle's point about the impossibility of rebuilding a comparable technological civilization on any imaginable time scale after a total collapse has also occurred to me. What is less clear is what we could do if we preserved a substantial fraction of our current scientific knowledge, somehow. That may enable something quite different to be built, something in which biology, rather than physics and chemistry, plays a predominant role ...

Steve Waddell's avatar

Thanks Jeremy. And then there's the comment attributed to Ilya Prigogine, Nobel Prize-winning chemist: “When a complex system is far from equilibrium, small islands of coherence in a sea of chaos have the capacity to shift the entire system to a higher order.” That's what I see happening...with "collapse" (I always say 'most people will experience it as collapse' as others focus on re-creation. As Leonard Cohen sung: ""Forget your perfect offering

There is a crack, a crack in everything

That's how the light gets in."

13 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?