2/07/2024

Headline, February 09 2024/ ''' EXTINCTION PANIC EXTREMITIES '''


''' EXTINCTION PANIC

 EXTREMITIES '''



THE 1920S WERE ALSO A PERIOD when the public - traumatized by a recent pandemic, a devastating world war and and starting techno developments - was gripped by the conviction that humanity might soon shuffle off this mortal coil.

! OPINION ! FOR MANKIND : EXTINCTION PANIC IS BACK - right on schedule. The current polycrises is real, but what happened a century ago may show us a way out.

'' DO YOU think we'll need to buy guns? ''  The student's question seemed to drop the temperature in the room by several degrees. I was at a dinner with fellow academics, a few college students and a guest speaker who had just delivered an inspiring talk about climate justice.

Sensing confusion, the student clarified :  Planetary catastrophe was inevitable in the near term, which means people would soon be living behind walled communities. Since Republicans would be armed, she said, she just wanted to know how to keep the people she cared about safe.

The guest speaker took a moment to process this information, then suggested that the student worry more about growing vegetables than buying guns.

That conversation stuck with me over the years not because the students' were unusual but because they've become commonplace.

The literary scholar Paul-Saint-Amour has described the expectation of apocalypse - the sense that all history's catastrophes and geopolitical traumas are leading us to '' the prospect of an even more devastating futurity'' - as the quintessential modern attitude. It's visible everywhere in what has come to be known as the polycrisis.

Climate anxiety, of the sort expressed by that student, is driving new fields in psychology, experimental therapies and debated about what a recent New Yorker article called '' the morality of having kids in a burning, drowning world.'' Public health infrastructure groans under the weight of a lingering pandemic, while we are told to  expect worse contagions to come.

The near coup at OpenAI, which resulted at least in part from a dispute about whether  artificial intelligence could soon threaten humanity with extinction, is only the latest example of our ballooning angst about technology overtaking us.

Meanwhile, some experts are warning of imminent population collapse. Elon Musk, who donated $10 million to researchers studying fertility and population decline, called it '' a much bigger risk to civilization than global warming.''

Politicians on both sides of the aisle speak openly about the possibility that conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East could spark World War III. Donald Trump has made '' the N-word '' - he hastens to specify '' the nuclear world '' a talking point at his rallies.

The conviction that the human species could be on its way out, extinguished by our own selfishness and violence, may well be the last bipartisan impulse.

In a certain sense, some of this is new. Apocalyptic anxieties are a mainstay of human culture. But they are not a constant. 

In response to rapid changes in science, technology and geopolitics, they tend to spike into brief but intense extinction panics  - periods of acute pessimism about humanity's future - before quieting again as those developments are metabolized.

These days, it can feel as though the existential challenges humanity faces are unprecedented. But a major extinction panic happened 100 years ago, and the similarities are unnerving.

Understanding the extinction panic of the 1920s is useful to understanding our  tumultuous 2020s and the gloomy mood that pervades the decade.

The Psychology and Philosophy of this master publishing continues. The World Students Society thanks author Tyler Austin Harper.

With most respectful dedication to Mankind, Leaders, Students, Professors and Teachers of the world. See You all prepare for Great Global Elections on !WOW! - the exclusive and eternal ownership of every student in the world : wssciw.blogspot.com and Twitter X !E-WOW! - The Ecosystem 2011 :

Good Night and God Bless

SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless

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