| > Neither of us have I've lived longer than you have. > We have billions of years to solve both problems That's true, but we don't have billions of years to solve climate change. But no matter how much time you have, you cannot get around the fact that exponential growth is unsustainable even with arbitrarily advanced technology. Unless you can find a way to exceed the speed of light (and good luck with that) resources can only ever grow quadratically. > It seems the height of both pessimism and hubris to believe that you can accurately predict the limitations of humans billions of years from now. No, it is your unbounded optimism which is unjustified, unless you can figure out how to do an end-run around relativity. > Do not presume to tell me what I want by projecting your own desire to die someday. First of all, I don't want to die. Dying sucks. But living forever would suck more. And I didn't intend "you don't want..." to be taken literally. What I meant was something more along the lines of: I know you think you want to live forever, but I claim that's because you have not fully thought through the consequences, and if you were able to live forever you would find that it's not as great as you think. But that just seemed a little too wordy. > And more will be created No, this is the thing you have not fully taken on board. Human creativity only seems unbounded because our lives are so short and so we're only able to sample a tiny fraction of what is possible. But with a truly unbounded life span that would no longer be true. You really could experience every possible sensory input an arbitrary number of times, and eventually you would get sick and tired of everything. > please work on solving that problem, rather than spending energy telling other people not to solve other problems in parallel Those are not mutually exclusive. Part of solving climate change is persuading as many people as possible to work on it. Furthermore, one of the principal drivers of climate change is complacency and boundless optimism, the blind faith that some other smart person will figure it out and everything will be OK. It won't. > that problem needs political experts That too. But it also needs you. And everyone else. |
Growth can be cubic if you're expanding outwards at a constant speed and assuming (on a large enough scale) an even distribution of matter in space.