Mustrum_Ridcully
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At what tech level can I travel back in time to avert my death after I died?
At what tech level can I travel back in time to avert having being erased from existence?
If I'd plug in the numbers of 3150 B.C., will I get the same results as you get with the current numbers? Or will it be lower?
The problem is that we know that such things can happen. We cannot presume that planetary colonization will happen, but we could also never presume that we would come up with better agricultural technology, or antibiotics. I am not convinced it's a good use of Occam's Razor to assume stagnation when we have plenty of examples against stagnation. That would be using the razor and cutting off parts we know we need. You will likely have to reconsider the confidence of certain assumptions made (like how many people can we sustain, how long do humans live..).
At what tech level can I travel back in time to avert having being erased from existence?
Stupid question:Instinct versus science, round two. Fight!
That's not really relevant to what's there. The idea that humans would leave the Earth at some point would adjust the particulars of the DA only in that it'd increase the total capacity for how many humans would be alive at once (e.g. 20 billion people collectively supported across two planets, rather than 10 billion people supported across one). In that case, you simply adjust the calculations and modify the final results accordingly.
It's not an inevitability by the terms of the article, just a likelihood (e.g. 95%). Given that it's plausible to state that only a finite number of humans will be born - rather than an infinite number - the premise of the article certainly seems reasonable.
I'd say that it's option B, since it's not particularly concerned with questions of how humans would theoretically come to an end. It is, as you note, a purely mathematical construct, which is sort of the point. If you presume (as noted above) that there won't be a unlimited number of humans, then it's a question of trying to make a construct to guess how many there will be, and working backwards from there.
I suspect that the hubris is in assigning humanity "infinite possibilities of the future" and in presuming that even loose models of statistical analysis don't apply to us, but that's just me.![]()
If I'd plug in the numbers of 3150 B.C., will I get the same results as you get with the current numbers? Or will it be lower?
But aren't there problems here - could Earth have supported 6 $Billion humans without advances in agriculture? What about our lifespan expectations? Didn't they change over time.Isn't math one of the sciences? Or is science one of the maths? I can never keep them straight.
See below for why I don't think this is actually a factor.
The problem here is that none of the potential variables you're throwing out are meaningful, with regards to colonizing other planets and such. It's an Occam's Razor thing: when you have competing hypotheses, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected.
Presuming that a probabilistic model of the timeline of human extinction is flawed because it doesn't take into account an assumption of planetary colonization is backward, because it posits an event that has no particular model for suggesting, however remotely, that such a thing will happen.
You're saying that because something could theoretically happen, we can't make a prediction as to what might happen. That's the equivalent of not planning out your week because you can't be certain that the world won't suddenly combust. You make predictions with the best data you have on hand, and discount the things that don't have some suggestion of likelihood.
The problem is that we know that such things can happen. We cannot presume that planetary colonization will happen, but we could also never presume that we would come up with better agricultural technology, or antibiotics. I am not convinced it's a good use of Occam's Razor to assume stagnation when we have plenty of examples against stagnation. That would be using the razor and cutting off parts we know we need. You will likely have to reconsider the confidence of certain assumptions made (like how many people can we sustain, how long do humans live..).
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