Yes, we should not spend incredible amounts of money to solve a problem that we aren't entirely sure is even a problem. Do you really think that we should throw money at every potential problem based off of irrational fear?
I am sorry but you misunderstood, probably intentionally. We know the climate is going to change and we know any change is for the worse. You asked for details. But we do not have or need details. The fact that we don't know the actual details doesn't mean thinking it is a problem is irrational fear. This is absurd.
Of course I don't know the solution. No one has that sort of knowledge. You claim that you can predict and plan for the future, but you can't. You simply lack the information.
We know very well that lowering CO2 expulsion will improve the situation so your argument doesn't work. Actually, it is silly. You claim that we don't need to know the effects of increasing CO2 levels as long as it is a side effect. I don't. We expulse CO2 which increase the levels in the atmosphere. I say that we should know it is harmless before we do it. Even if we don't know the effect we shouldn't do it. And of course we know very well what kind of influences it may have.
I don't claim I can predict the future. You claim one doesn't need to know that a problem gets solved to know that it will. This is, again, absurd.
This is the problem with social engineering. It takes an astounding level of arrogance to act like you can predict the problems of the future and that you know all the solutions.
You are really talking glibberish here.
The market gets around this little problem by using the mechanism of price to allow people to adapt and change their behavior based off of changing conditions. The collective knowledge of society dispersed among individuals is far more trustworthy than the babbling of intellectuals.
There are tons of problems that don't get solved. Why would it be only natural for these problems to be solved? They don't even need to be solved? Why wouldn't the market just ignore it?
You hold the same beliefs as this person, so I don't think it irrelevant. Let me quote Well, why don't you take the predicted demographic development in 2050 and then calculate the energy needed for all people in the world to live like we do now. You are making the same claim that he made, that our world is unsustainable.
Pardon me? His problem was that he didn't account for new technology. That is what you said before. My scenario is independent from technology as I looked at the limitations of the sun putting energy in the earth.
So why should I listen to you when you are peddling the exact same ideas?
So you are actually reading and understanding what I am saying!? No no, you can't be serious. If you do then why the level of your replies is so low?
Once again this shows that you really haven't grasped how capitalism and the free market work. The economy isn't a independent entity. It refers to all the actions of every person who produces and consumes wealth. Everyone pursues their self-interests and everyone is better off for it.
You really do have a religious belief in the free market, don't you? First off, the free market and actual kapitalism don't even exist so I do not understand what they have got to do with this discussion. Let alone how they could offer a solution if they did.
Obviously the free market doesn't pick the path that is best for everyone. Free market isn't operated by the interest of the collective. It is operated by supply and demand. I don't see how a system can solve all our problems because it is operated by supply and demand. Maybe you don't understand the free market that well.
Furthermore, it is not like a truck without a driver. It does not blindly speed along oblivious to all problems.
No, there is a driver but he isn't looking out of the window. He is looking at a computer screen showing supply and demand so that he can jump out of the truck just before it hits the concrete block.
As I said earlier, through the mechanism of price, it adapts to changing circumstances with an astonishing flexibility. When the price of a product increases, people buy less of it. When the price drops, more is purchased. People don't need to know why the prices change, and truly no one does.
If more energy is needed than is availible the price will go to infinity. Obviously that cannot happen. So people have to give up their need for energy because the price gets to low while it is rising. This means ordinary people can no longer drive their car. Which means they can only work close at home. Goods that are transported large distances become very expensive. Now you may argue that humans will organise themselves in another way but that is only natural and not the point. The point is that their potential is limited. I don't see how you can claim that because people adjust no potential is lost. You keep talking about these people that talked bout overpopulation and famine. It is not like famine doesn't happen in this world. I don't get the point at all.
The knowledge is decentralized and spread throughout society as a whole. The market brings together this knowledge and allows people to react to it much better than any social engineer could. It is far more intelligent to rely on society as a whole to solve problems than to rely on fearmongers with pitiable track records.
This is a whole different kind of discussion. I am not arguing for one political system or the other. I don't care about who takes the descisions. I am arguing for the dangers of climate change. The moment the US grain belt has turned into the american sahara, the moment all the costal areas become part of the ocean, the moment no farmer can still do its job because of the climate change then there will not be an economy at all. Animals don't have economies. Ancient humans also do not have economies. There will be no supply. It will be impossible to transport goods from an area of surplus to an area of scarity.
But when we talk about the current economy and short term changes like the energy needs of the future. It is not about what happens with supply and demand. It is about what happens to the stock market. It can crash down because of a silly rumour, evaporating billions in hours.
People have been making wild claims about doom in the near future for hundreds of years. Whether it be a population bomb or an energy crisis. They've been consistently wrong.
You are right. But I am not claiming that we will all be dead in a 100 years. I claim that nuclear weapons and climate change are the two threats to human civilisation.
Even if they are correct in that some problem does lie ahead in the future, I wouldn't trust them to solve it. Private enterprise would be much more effective at dealing with any problems than governments.
It is so funny that you continue to follow your own dogma. Who is conserving energy? Does it matter for a company building television that their tv wastes some energy which price is still affordable today? No it doesn't matter a bit. So how would they care?
The economy is nothing other than society as a whole.
What!? No wonder you can't stop with viewing human civilisation as an economy. For you they are the same thing. If you don't take this back I will stop arguing because then you are so deluded it will have no more use.
To be more accurate you should have said "Sure, people may save there own skins."
People are already dying because of pollution caused by industry and cars. I don't see how and why they will save their skin. Let alone which economic princible will be responsible for this.
And that's exactly what will happen. People acting rationally in their own self-interest will do a far better job of protecting themselves than you could.
First off, people aren't rational. Second, there is a difference between a human and a costumer. Humans want to safe their skin and be more rational and do something for the enviroment, conservation, reduce animal torture. But costumers only look at prices and their buget, not caring how it is producted.
Same goes for the nuclear prolifration. Why haven't people acted in their rational self interest and got rid of nuclear weapons? Or at the least of leaders who increase prolifiration like Bush.
And yes, the economy will change. It changes continually. The real question is how it will change. You can't know that. No one can.
But how do you know that the Chinese and Indian people will be able to live at the standards of living in the west today? You don't. And how much shock the energy problem will have on the economy on a whole.
No, but energy consumption is lower than it would be if the price had stayed the same. Are you seriously going to deny the fundamental tenets of supply and demand?
No. But this just shows that suppy and demand have nothing to do with it. We only have a limited amount of fossil fuel. We should use it in the most rational way possible. Not in the way dictated by the free market.
People will naturally conserve it.
You mean that people will just not be able to afford it. If they really conserved it the price would have stayed the same. When it gets too expensive they are too late.
What does it mean for the economy when the prices of energy triple? Would we be richer or poorer? Or are you denying this will happen? If so then you contradict yourself because you first acknowledge that eventhough the energy price got higher people didn't start to conserve it.
I don't need to. I've repeatedly denied that anyone can have a really acccurate view of what the future will hold. Could people in 1800 have any idea about oil being used as a major power source or nuclear fission? Why are we any different today?
Then how do you know it will be solved. Granted, if we get a new source of energy then we may or may not know about it. Actually, people knew long before 1800 that oil could be burned for energy. But at this point in time we do know that we either collect energy from the sun, directly or indirectly. Or that we turn matter into energy. We can calculate the amount of energy the sun puts into the earth and we do also know fusion will not be available before 2050.
So what is the proper level of energy that we should be using? Please give it in Kilowatt hours per person.
That depends on how many sources of sustainable energy you have. At this point in time, in holland, we shouldn't depend on more that 400 KWh a year per person. At least, we can't expect to use more than that in the future. This number should be significantly increased before 2050. Now people in the EU are actually trying to get to do this.
Of course unsustainable energy can be used as well. But on the long term we cannot last on that. You think it will be solved automatically. I think we should think about it now. Furtermore since we already need to decrease CO2 to prevent destroying the ecosystems.
I don't think you are a nihilist. I do think that if you logically and rationally extrapolate from your fundamental views, you would be one.
I can guantee you that you should think I am one because I can't imagine someone getting more rational and logical then I already am.
And no, I'm the one arguing for quality of life in this debate. You are arguing that we should impoversh the world to prevent a catastrophe that we have no reason to believe will happen.
If you think people getting rid of your second car and not driving around for fun is impoverty then fine. But at this point in time people are still dying because of their poverty. Really, I don't see any problem with impoverishing those that use too much energy.
No, you aren't arguing about quality of life. You limit yourself to economics, which are totally irrelevant.
Economics 101. The economy doesn't have interests.
Then let's call it 'the effects of the economy'. This is getting silly...
People have interests and should have the freedom to pursue them.
Once again you don't have an understanding of what the economy is. Let me repeat myself. The free market economy is nothing more than what occurs when individuals are free to produce and consume what they want to. Any movement away from this is a restriction of freedom. What you want, is the government to step in and tell us what we can and can't do. You believe that people will be better off because of your intervention, but you are wrong. They will be left worse off for it, and more importantly less free for it. You don't think people are acting as you think they ought to, so you want to force them to follow your beliefs. It's truly the story of almost all social movements of the 20th century. It's paternalism. Daddy knows best.
Again, stupid rant about your own political views. I don't even want a government. You want one. You are the daddy knows best guy. But you don't even realise this.
I never said the government should make restrictions. I said that there is a problem with climate change that is dangerous for the human species. And that there is an energy problem that will make us all poor when we run out of 'free energy'. Every physicist knows there is no 'free energy'. But 'free energy' is a consumers reality today.
In the political system I would propose corporations do not exist. This does not mean people have limited rights. It means that corporations don't have more rights granted to them by special laws giving them more rights than people. Also, all organisations will be democracies instead of tyrranies. This means that the interest of the people is actually considered instead of the interests of the corporations and the stock market.