Do you mean just, as in only? Imagine that, nothing more, so says Nordic.People are just animals
It’s would be good to know where you’re coming from Nordic.
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Do you mean just, as in only? Imagine that, nothing more, so says Nordic.People are just animals
Isn't this a rather direct summoning of the image of TEH SHEEPLE, that well known thoughtstopper? C'mon you know we're WAY different than mere animals - they don't have wireless internet.Nordic wrote:People are just animals, and if you've ever encountered overgrazed ranchland, it ain't that much different.
Yes, because weather is certainly an outside factor affecting population group stasis. But more interesting and just as applicable to this idea of the instability of equilibrium must be the effect that the "outside agency" of a thinking, reasoning population group with the inherent ability to provide adaptive solutions to a seeming endless series of encountered enivornmental challenges might have in this regard. Now if we could only find one. A thinking reasoning population, that is. That would sure come in handy.Cosmic Cowbell wrote:Question: As pertaining to this article and the concept of "outside factors", should anthropogenic forcing of extreme climate variations be consider by definition as such?
I think I understand what you're saying, but sometimes I think the exclusionary "just" is not only appropriate, but also necessary — in a similar way as a curse word might sometimes be necessary: in order to get the attention of someone who hasn't been listening. (Not intending to imply that this is "you," necessarily.)Sounder wrote:The word 'just' strikes me as exclusionary of further possibilities.
So I do not care for that word in general, as for me it does not lend itself to subtlety (or intuition.)
But no one is even suggesting that the human race might be extinct within 100 years because of some "mistake". They're suggesting extinction is imminent because the human race has thrived incredibly. Sure, if you continue to allow the likes of Tony Hayward to personally determine the health of the planet, things are going to go to shit. But if you think the issue of human waste disposal has not improved immeasurably in the last hundred years you're barking up the wrong tree. FYI, as recently as 1950, the city used to channel untreated raw sewage directly into the Santa Monica Bay. Ah yes, the good old days, before there were so goddam many fucking people! Stupid animals.Nordic wrote:Special people don't make mistakes.
nordic wrote:Our affects on the planet are that of animals. We eat, we breathe, we consume, we poop, we destroy.
In the same way that cattle will overgraze some rather beautiful and pristine landscapes if there are too many of them.
Who do you think owns them?Hammer of Los wrote:Who owns the "beautiful and pristine landscapes" of this good earth? For whose benefit ought they to be maintained as such?
That's not even the point. The point is that we're animals. Yes, "just" animals.barracuda wrote:But if you think the issue of human waste disposal has not improved immeasurably in the last hundred years you're barking up the wrong tree. FYI, as recently as 1950, the city used to channel untreated raw sewage directly into the Santa Monica Bay. Ah yes, the good old days, before there were so goddam many fucking people! Stupid animals.
There's a name for this piece of strawmanning sophistry, but I forget. What's wrong with, "Therefore humans should (in their own interest) intelligently manage the resources they need to survive"?Hammer of Los wrote:Resource depletion is undesirable.You can only separate resource depletion and population in argument; in the real world, an irreducibly complex and interdependent place, they are inextricably linked.
Humans deplete resources.
Therefore humans are undesirable.
I think it's called "paranoia"JackRiddler wrote:
There's a name for this piece of strawmanning sophistry, but I forget.
Sounds like that strawman "slipped" on the ice, and fell down the "slope" on his ass.JackRiddler wrote:There's a name for this piece of strawmanning sophistry, but I forget. What's wrong with, "Therefore humans should (in their own interest) intelligently manage the resources they need to survive"?Hammer of Los wrote:Resource depletion is undesirable.You can only separate resource depletion and population in argument; in the real world, an irreducibly complex and interdependent place, they are inextricably linked.
Humans deplete resources.
Therefore humans are undesirable.
Well, it's slightly different, in that this pyramid scheme has been running for the last hundred thousand years, give or take. And just to be clear, I don't dispute that we are just animals. I agree entirely. Our actions are the actions of natural forces in play, nothing more. But each animal species has its own niche of abilities. I just don't happen to believe that the natural successes of human specialities necessarily guarantee our own doom by definition. They may help secure our longevity, if correctly harnessed.Nordic wrote:This "thriving" is exactly like getting in early on a Ponzi scheme and thinking you've found a GREAT investment.
No different than any other animal in that manner, with the codicil that we don't have to consume or waste or pollute as much as we are entrained to do by the corporate forces which attempt to determine and limit our spectrum of choices while maximising their profit margins. It's not a requirement, right?Nordic wrote:As regard to the other argument here, the fact of the matter is that we've only been able to "thrive" so successfully by consuming a staggering, and unsustainable, amount of stuff.