Android
Solyaris
I'm just looking to open discussion on this topic, not make a specific point. This is all theoretical and does not necessarily reflect my views.
Let's say that we don't come up with a viable large-scale alternative to fossil-fuels.. not just for transportation, but also for plastics. Large-scale is the important part. Cost-effective is another, the rich may be okay but not the poor or middle-class. What happens after that?
Do we grasp at what we once had and fight over the resources and technology that remains? Most regions that can be connected by the remaining archaic forms of transportation aren't self-sustaining. The US would have a hard time transporting food from the bread basket both east and west. I know the town, county, and state I live in wouldn't likely be self-sufficient. Should money be invested now in building a fleet of sailing ships, expanding the rail system (should they be steam-engines?), etc? Can technology continue to grow and expand at the same rate without plastics? Do middle-eastern and other oil rich countries or regions become the new world powers (assuming they would stockpile the last of their oil instead of selling it)?
I personally imagine the world falling into chaos, at least for awhile. Disease running rampant because medicine can't be adequately distributed. Starvation (especially in cities and other population dense areas). A "Might is Right" attitude prevailing in regards to distribution of essential resources. Lots of hoarding. The Fracturing of large states into smaller bodies. Regions falling into anarchy (the nasty type). I just don't see humanity being able to adjust quick enough to such a dramatic change in the structure of the world. Perhaps it would be the Malthusian Correction we've been needing.
Let's say that we don't come up with a viable large-scale alternative to fossil-fuels.. not just for transportation, but also for plastics. Large-scale is the important part. Cost-effective is another, the rich may be okay but not the poor or middle-class. What happens after that?
Do we grasp at what we once had and fight over the resources and technology that remains? Most regions that can be connected by the remaining archaic forms of transportation aren't self-sustaining. The US would have a hard time transporting food from the bread basket both east and west. I know the town, county, and state I live in wouldn't likely be self-sufficient. Should money be invested now in building a fleet of sailing ships, expanding the rail system (should they be steam-engines?), etc? Can technology continue to grow and expand at the same rate without plastics? Do middle-eastern and other oil rich countries or regions become the new world powers (assuming they would stockpile the last of their oil instead of selling it)?
I personally imagine the world falling into chaos, at least for awhile. Disease running rampant because medicine can't be adequately distributed. Starvation (especially in cities and other population dense areas). A "Might is Right" attitude prevailing in regards to distribution of essential resources. Lots of hoarding. The Fracturing of large states into smaller bodies. Regions falling into anarchy (the nasty type). I just don't see humanity being able to adjust quick enough to such a dramatic change in the structure of the world. Perhaps it would be the Malthusian Correction we've been needing.