

catmoon wrote:Your basic premise that we are in some way dependent on oil is incorrect. It's just the fuel of choice at the moment, an arrangement of convenience. It would be pretty straightforward to synthesize fuels and chemical feedstocks directly using power from nuclear plants. The only reason we don't do it right now is that it is not cost effective. Well that and the drawbacks to nuclear power. If the Germans could synthesize fuels in 1945...
The end of the world has been prophesied pretty much every year since Jesus was around. Time after time it has been proven wrong, and time after time new prophets have arisen. Always they claim we face circumstances we have never faced before, and each time we find a way through. Always the gloomy extrapolations are produced, and always they are invalidated by simply doing things differently.
viniketa wrote:I think there is little question that the current global economic model, contingent on the infinity of economic expansion, will eventually self-destruct. Impossible at this point to say whether it will suddenly deflate or grind to a slow halt.
Even if we develop new 'extraction industries' based on mining the resources of other planets (or asteroid belts), continual economic expansion of production surplus at the rate needed to sustain ROI expected in current capital markets is impossible.
The throes of transitioning to whatever becomes the next energy base will likely be painful and not very pretty. In short, it may not reach the catastrophic proportions of "world's end", but it could be the end of the world as we know it. Which is not necessarily a bad thing, if we can come up with a more workable replacement in the meantime.

catmoon wrote:I don't think it will go that way at all. Given a way out of civilization collapse, people will take it. While it is true that currently, oil suppports nuclear energy to a small degree, it does not have to be so. Synthetic fuels can be made from carbon dioxide and water, given a large enough energy input, which would make nuclear power a net producer rather than a net consumer of petroleum fuels. In such a case, you would be solving the power crunch and global warming both. All that is required is a source of carbon. Paper waste, atmospheric carbon dioxide, carbonate rocks all fit the bill.
Will we grasp the nettle of nuclear power and solve the associated problems or simply accept the downsides and learn to live with them, and minimize them? I think we will. The reason is that as global economies start to conk out, it will become increasingly obvious that France is not much affected and continues to enjoy a high energy consumption lifestyle. France will become a sort of new Middle East, perhaps even exporting large amounts of power.
Huseng wrote:catmoon wrote:I don't think it will go that way at all. Given a way out of civilization collapse, people will take it. While it is true that currently, oil suppports nuclear energy to a small degree, it does not have to be so. Synthetic fuels can be made from carbon dioxide and water, given a large enough energy input, which would make nuclear power a net producer rather than a net consumer of petroleum fuels. In such a case, you would be solving the power crunch and global warming both. All that is required is a source of carbon. Paper waste, atmospheric carbon dioxide, carbonate rocks all fit the bill.
If this was possible it would already be implemented, or at least the initial stages of implementation would be seen when fuel prices are so high they're willing to tear up the Alberta landscape to suck out tar sands.
It all comes down to energy on return. If you spend more energy then you get back it isn't a source of energy. Our modern lifestyles in the west demand a certain degree of energy on return.
Will we grasp the nettle of nuclear power and solve the associated problems or simply accept the downsides and learn to live with them, and minimize them? I think we will. The reason is that as global economies start to conk out, it will become increasingly obvious that France is not much affected and continues to enjoy a high energy consumption lifestyle. France will become a sort of new Middle East, perhaps even exporting large amounts of power.
As I outlined above, even if you can keep the lights on, you need fossil fuels to run the industrial and agricultural parts of your society. To say, "Hey let's convert everything to electric!" is neither feasible nor realistic. You probably couldn't build a hoover dam strictly with electric motors and machinery.
Some estimates are pointing to the 2070s as the decade when most of the extractable oil will be out of the ground (note the graph above). So, as fossil fuels become scarce it'll be a question of whether we have the resources to even convert the whole system to alternative energy sources. It won't be possible and when the fossil fuels needed to support the system rapidly become unavailable and crippling expensive you'll see the reverse of industrialization: deindustrialization.
Red Faced Buddha wrote:Kind of agnostic on the Indian Buddhist cosmology.Buddha lived in India so of course Buddhism would be influenced by Hinduism.That's where I think the Indian Buddhist cosmology came from.However,that's no reason to discard it.So I'd say I'm an agnostic on the whole Indian Buddhist Cosmology.
Huseng wrote:Red Faced Buddha wrote:Kind of agnostic on the Indian Buddhist cosmology.Buddha lived in India so of course Buddhism would be influenced by Hinduism.That's where I think the Indian Buddhist cosmology came from.However,that's no reason to discard it.So I'd say I'm an agnostic on the whole Indian Buddhist Cosmology.
Hinduism is a creation of western Europeans. A blanket term for Indian polytheism invented in recent centuries.
Brahminism played a minimal role in the initial formation of Buddhism as Magadha was thought of as a demonic and backwards land by the Brahmins to the west.
If anything early Buddhism was influenced by the Jains who were likewise not Brahmins and had minimal influence from Vedic Brahmins.
Red Faced Buddha wrote:True but Indra/Sakra,Brahma,the Asuras,etc. all come from Hinduism.

viniketa wrote:One additional note: The "great god" Brahmā (of the Kevala Sutta, et al.) is not considered a "great god" in the pantheon, rather Brahmā is more like a "demiurge", credited with creation of the "world" and living beings in the world. The god Brahmā should not be confused with Brahman, the origin and support of the universe, the Supreme Cosmic Spirit.
See:
http://freethoughtpedia.com/wiki/Brahman
http://www.differencebetween.com/differ ... s-brahman/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahman
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