
Futurecide
W. Douglas Smith
Every civilization in history has faced moments of overwhelming existential crises, and they all eventually collapsed. Was this failure inherent in the evolution of civilization, something within the human species, or a combination of both? More importantly, was it predictable and unavoidable? Most civilizations believed they had a special relationship with the divine and were beyond the laws of nature. Our current economic civilization is now global and interdependent. Today’s economy is responsible for the most rapid mass extinction in Earth’s history. We face imminent catastrophic climate change and environmental disruption, yet the same sense of exceptionalism and hubris clouds humanity’s judgement and ability to act rationally.
Environmental disruption is making the planet uninhabitable. No economy can consume its way out of scarcity. This law of nature conflicts with many longstanding economic theories. Sheltered and self-absorbed elitists promote lies and prey on humanity’s most vulnerable instincts of pecking order, conformity, and obedience to authority. These primal instincts may be maladapted to civilization in its current form. Today’s elitists are choosing mass extinction in a false belief in their own invincibility. To survive, humanity can no longer follow delusional leaders to self-destruction.
In non-technical language, the author explores common phases in the development of past civilizations, and the critical junctures and decisions that made collapse inevitable. He investigates the linkages and contradictions between human social behavior, the economy, and the environment. In the closing pages, he identifies a clear path to redemption.
Duration - 10h 22m.
Author - W. Douglas Smith.
Narrator - Emily Anna Dinwiddie-Cole.
Published Date - Monday, 13 January 2025.
Location:
United States
Networks:
W. Douglas Smith
Emily Anna Dinwiddie-Cole
Austin Macauley Publishers
English Audiobooks
INAudio Audiobooks
Description:
Every civilization in history has faced moments of overwhelming existential crises, and they all eventually collapsed. Was this failure inherent in the evolution of civilization, something within the human species, or a combination of both? More importantly, was it predictable and unavoidable? Most civilizations believed they had a special relationship with the divine and were beyond the laws of nature. Our current economic civilization is now global and interdependent. Today’s economy is responsible for the most rapid mass extinction in Earth’s history. We face imminent catastrophic climate change and environmental disruption, yet the same sense of exceptionalism and hubris clouds humanity’s judgement and ability to act rationally. Environmental disruption is making the planet uninhabitable. No economy can consume its way out of scarcity. This law of nature conflicts with many longstanding economic theories. Sheltered and self-absorbed elitists promote lies and prey on humanity’s most vulnerable instincts of pecking order, conformity, and obedience to authority. These primal instincts may be maladapted to civilization in its current form. Today’s elitists are choosing mass extinction in a false belief in their own invincibility. To survive, humanity can no longer follow delusional leaders to self-destruction. In non-technical language, the author explores common phases in the development of past civilizations, and the critical junctures and decisions that made collapse inevitable. He investigates the linkages and contradictions between human social behavior, the economy, and the environment. In the closing pages, he identifies a clear path to redemption. Duration - 10h 22m. Author - W. Douglas Smith. Narrator - Emily Anna Dinwiddie-Cole. Published Date - Monday, 13 January 2025.
Language:
English
Opening Credits
Duración:00:00:10
About the Author
Duración:00:01:22
Dedication
Duración:00:00:12
Praises for Futurecide
Duración:00:00:57
Introduction
Duración:00:08:56
The Laws of Ecology
Duración:00:00:15
Chapter One: The End of the Holocene
Duración:00:43:12
Chapter Two: Lessons Learned and Lessons Forgotten
Duración:01:05:04
Chapter Three: Connecting the Dots
Duración:00:21:13
Chapter Four: Sociopathic Genes and Politics
Duración:00:43:27
Chapter Five: AI and Manipulation of the Truth
Duración:00:18:09
Chapter Six: The Last Roundup
Duración:00:44:46
Chapter Seven: System Thinking
Duración:00:28:32
Chapter Eight: The Decadence Gene
Duración:00:20:44
Chapter Nine: Bugs on the Windshield
Duración:00:13:35
Chapter Ten: The Paradox of Two Realities
Duración:00:50:38
Chapter Eleven: Government vs Governance
Duración:00:37:49
Chapter Twelve: Deregulation Gives Corruption License
Duración:00:23:44
Chapter Thirteen: Overpopulation
Duración:00:21:09
Chapter Fourteen: Gross Domestic Deception
Duración:00:47:13
Chapter Fifteen: Precautionary Principle and Security
Duración:00:31:32
Chapter Sixteen Greed, Sex, and Equity
Duración:00:15:21
Chapter Seventeen: Equity
Duración:00:26:01
Chapter Eighteen: Stewardship
Duración:00:07:10
Chapter Nineteen: Women and Civilization
Duración:00:19:43
Chapter Twenty: Discounting the Future
Duración:00:29:02
Retrospective
Duración:00:02:51
Closing Credits
Duración:00:00:12