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by macksd
1849 days ago
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>> And before you assume that's bad, don't forget that evolution makes organisms that do that I'm not exactly a highly qualified expert on evolution, but I hear this step in lines of thinking a lot and it strikes me as being a logical fallacy. As a more extreme example, I often hear "these climate changes activists make no sense because they're also the ones pushing evolution: why would a species evolve and then destroy the planet it evolved on"? It's also circular logic. Sometimes evolution results in weaker things dying off. But that doesn't mean that weaker things dying off is inherently a good thing and that because we have evolved we probably do it at the optimal rate. What you're seeing as the result of evolution is everything that survived SO FAR. It wasn't intentionally planned to keep surviving. It's just that those two things tend to go together. We could annihilate every living thing on the planet with an all-out nuclear war later this afternoon, and it wouldn't be inconsistent with the theory of evolution. |
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If we detonated all nuclear arsenals the planet would barely notice.
Chicxulub impact event had yield comparable to 100 million megatons of TNT.
Assuming we have 10 000 nuclear warheads each with yield of 100 megatons of TNT it would be still ~100 less than Chicxulub impact event.
Also, we already did destroy most of megafauna, but the whole life is just a different ballpark.
We would need to change Earth into Venus end even then it may not be enough.
BTW - It is also true that all pain and misery on this planet is the result of evolution.