It also is our doom. Understand that ecological collapse is not something genera upon genera survive.
Only ten thousand years ago. Ten. A majority of Earth's megafauna went extinct. Why? Because of a shift in temperature. Such a simple thing thing effects so many different aspects of life that evolved for certain conditions, conditions no longer there, they all died out en masse. The Mastodon, the Mammoth, Smilodon, Ground Sloths, the Rhinos, and the list goes on and on. 20,000 to 10,000 years sounds long but it's just a glimpse away in the history of the planet, and indeed all these mammals died fairly quickly.
Earth was never made for life, it exists with its own phenomenon independent of life, that can be effected by it as well.
Ecological collapse is the last thing anyone should want. It is not the golden ticket, it may very well, theoretically at least, end in our own eventual extinction along with the other forms of life we're carrying with us. Remember the Camels of North America, the Ground Sloth, the many different wolves and cats.
All of them were wiped out because of temperature change in a matter of two or three thousand years. Do you think we will be much different in an even worse scenario with an ever growing number of billions of people reliant on energy that pushes us further and further to that edge? I'm not even talking KT-Boundary Extinction, let alone Permian Extinction levels. Life will go on and adapt without us, but a lot of life won't.
Those gone to the fossil record will probably include us. Give it 5,000-10,000 years. Humanity will be struggling to survive and adapt. We aren't particularly good at adaption, we're the last species of the Homo genera. All of our family tree went extinct faster than the mammoth did.
We won't be much different if we embrace ecological and climactic collapse. Life on Earth is a phenomenon, and like all phenomenon it relies on certain conditions to exist. Without those conditions, there's die off of genera.
Not to be dark and dreary, if you know a little about prehistory, you'll realize just how fragile ground we currently stand on. We may rule today, but every king has his reign. No matter how impossible it seems to him at the time, he will be succeeded eventually.
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