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by baq
1656 days ago
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> I propose that we're nowhere near our ideational limits, which give us the imaginative capacity to form new solutions within those limits you cite. the problem is, thermodynamics is so generic that it's hard to imagine how to sidestep it - and people do try all the time. e.g. imagine we have a commercially viable fusion reactor, which translates to basically unlimited energy once you build enough of them that they can be operated and maintained using only fusion power from sister reactors. sounds like post-scarcity world, except if you keep power consumption growing for like 1-2% a year, you'll boil the oceans in a few centuries due to waste heat. if you invent a technology to capture and repurpose enough waste heat to avoid this problem, you sidestep thermodynamics. if you sidestep thermodynamics, there's a lot more you can do than just making fusion 100% efficient... |
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For example, power consumption may stop growing even while "real" consumption continues to grow. Or we may spread to other planets so that power consumption can keep growing and we don't care if the oceans boil.
Or something else might happen that is hard to predict in the same way that medieval people would find the Internet hard to predict. Medieval people may have made equally valid claims about bounds on the speed at which a messenger can transmit a message, even if you manage to develop a commercially viable racehorse that can run at top speed 24/7.