• cheddar@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    Climate change, antibiotics resistance, that kind of stuff. A slow and boring apocalypse instead of what we see in the movies.

  • MTK@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Most likely climate change, after that maybe war and past that maybe disease from super bacteria that does not respond to antibiotics or a virus that is very deadly but with a long incubation, basically a deadlier covid, since the world has showed that it is completely unable to get it’s shit together and do basic things like social distance and masks.

    The last one is not as likely in the sense that it’s not likely to kill all of us, just a really big part, but I fully expect to see something like that happening in my lifetime and causing the deaths of hundreds of millions.

  • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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    3 days ago

    pollution. im not even talking climate change but that we continue to survive generally by polluting more. even when we do things better we just grow more and end up polluting more and eventually we will drop but we will continue by eating our own tale but the result will not be infinite.

  • PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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    3 days ago

    Slowly dying out as our descendants evolve into divergent races and species and stop being technically classifiable as human.

    People who think doom is upon us really don’t understand just how hard it is to kill all of us, it would take a confluence of several extinction level events at this point to completely wipe us out just because of how resilient we’ve made our society to collapse factors.

    We’re gonna live, we’re not gonna escape living with the world we’ve made as easily as just all dying because of it, and someday one of your descendants is gonna regard you the same way we do the savannah apes that figured out how to walk upright to get a better vantage over the tall grass.

    As for what our descendants will evolve into, honestly, it’s gonna be a much more designed process as we continue to master gene editing tech. I could genuinely see several branches just being different “forks” of the base human body plan that try to resolve “design flaws” like disconnecting the respiratory and digestive systems or restoring partial water breathing or fully activating our potential for bioluminescence.

    I think 40k is on to something too, the practice of the mechanicus of augmenting their bodies with tech to the point of even enabling their own brains to perform mass data analysis akin to a binary computer will be where a lot of folks end up too.

    In fact I believe that the moment a “third hemisphere” implant to the brain is successfully developed will be the actual singularity point for humanity rather than the development of an independently intelligent artificial being. Unlocking the potential of human pattern recognition in harmony with binary number mastery would instantly change so much about how people even understand the world let alone interact with it that predicting beyond that point is more an experiment of speculative evolution than of more standard futurism.

    As for immediately, I believe we’re a lot closer to a solar punk world than anyone’s really comfortable with accepting, because doing that means giving into fatalism means them having personally failed a goal within reach instead of “just accepting reality.”

    • UltraHamster64@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Can you explain the last part (about solarpunk) what fatalism do you mean and what goal did they fail? And who are “they”?

    • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      I would like to suggest the Wayward Pines trilogy by Blake Crouch. (The books, not the television adaptation). It’s a great scifi read. There he took the same idea of humans evolving beyond being human, but not in a controlled manner like you describe, but naturally and a bit bleaker.

      Here’s the blurb for the first book:

      The first book of the smash-hit Wayward Pines trilogy, from the New York Times bestselling author of Dark Matter, Recursion, and Upgrade

      One way in. No way out.

      Secret Service agent Ethan Burke arrives in Wayward Pines, Idaho, with a mission: locate two federal agents who went missing in the bucolic town one month earlier. But within minutes of his arrival, Ethan is involved in a violent accident. He comes to in a hospital, with no ID, no cell phone, and no briefcase.

      As the days pass, Ethan’s investigation turns up more questions than answers: Why can’t he get any phone calls through to his wife and son in the outside world? Why doesn’t anyone believe he is who he says he is? And what is the purpose of the electrified fences surrounding the town? Are they meant to keep the residents in? Or something else out?

      Each step closer to the truth takes Ethan farther from the world he knew, from the man he was, until he must face a horrifying fact—he may never get out of Wayward Pines alive.

      The nail-bitingly suspenseful opening installment in Blake Crouch’s blockbuster Wayward Pines trilogy, Pines is at once a brilliant mystery tale and the first step into a genre-bending saga of suspense, science fiction, and horror.

      • PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        I think that’s what people really ought to fear about our future. Once there are enough of us, once we’ve spread out widely enough, horrors and disgusts the likes of which we speak of in hushed tones praying we never find ourselves even adjacent to them will be cut loose into the universe.

        Until we develop means of consistent and viable FTL travel and communication, we’re going to all live with knowing that any heinous act we can possibly imagine is not only playing out somewhere, but the victims of it were probably bred for the purpose of making the show as enjoyable as possible for whatever freaks arrange for it.

        Even when we regain the proper footing of being able to enforce basic rules of prevention of the worst things we can imagine, the sickos will always be finding another remote world, another star at the fringes where justice can’t reach reliably yet.

        We will live in a universe of untold prosperity, and yet also one of an eternal game of whackamole against the worst kinds of us that could ever exist, and some that can’t yet but will come into existence with what we learn going forward.

        Even colonizing the solar system, we will regularly see headlines that force us to ask if we are doing enough to protect others, if everyone can live like kings while some are made to be the victims of Caligula, or of Pol Pot, or of Jim Jones, or of any of the other depraved madmen of history who made those underfoot their playthings for the worst impulses that not even the call of the void dares give an ear to.

  • Aphelion@lemm.ee
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    3 days ago

    PFAS will render us unable to reproduce, while at the same time the ecosystem will collapse to the point we can’t feed ourselves. It’s already begun.

  • Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    End of mankind - nothing, really. Even with climate change or nuclear war, the rich will live on. It will be a shitty, greedy, undeserving populace that lives on, but mankind will live on.

    End of the world as we know it - climate change. I don’t know of anything else more existential

    • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      The “end of the world as we know it” happens every day though. Maybe a bit philosophical, but humans are actually very good at handling change. So we will adapt, for better or worse.

    • thirdBreakfast@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago
      • Climate change contributing to
      • Climate refugees contributing to
      • Breakdown in social cohesion contributing to
      • Populism, oligarchs, and authoritarianism contributing to
      • Breakdown of international cooperation contributing to
      • Inter-nation conflict contributing to
      • GOTO 10
    • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      Nah, we’re far too resourceful to be killed by climate change.

      It may take out large chunks of the global population, but we will adapt with technology to be able to still sustain billions of humans.

      • kbin_space_program@kbin.run
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        3 days ago

        No. The melting of the ice caps is now self-sustaining. We dont have enough energy as a species to begin to reverse it now, and it is making itself worse now with every day.

        The current glacier they’re worried about in Antarctica is estimated to increase global sea levels by up to 3 meters.

        That, by itself puts every single port in the world partially underwater, and most of the major airports too. That means every developed country in the world is looking at death and famine at a scale not seen since the Permian Extinction.

        And thats just one glaicier that will be popping before 2030. All of Greenland is also in the process of popping, and that could mean 10m plus of sea level rise by 2050.

        • ThrowawayPermanente@sh.itjust.works
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          3 days ago

          Literally no serious person believes the sea level will rise by 10m in the next 26 years, that’s just looney toons. It’s an extreme scenario even if were to take 10x that long.

        • GladiusB@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Yes. But we don’t all live in ports. Will it take out hundreds of thousands and some major cities? Yes. But there are still billions of people left.

        • morphballganon@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          I do not mean to downplay the seriousness of the issue, but you are acting like new ports being built is out of the question.

          • kbin_space_program@kbin.run
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            3 days ago

            It’s an issue given that almost everything everyone buys relies on sea traffic. If it doesn’t, then something required to make it did.

            For example: the amount of wheat and grain that travels via ship is insane. And those facilities can’t just be built overnight. They need railways to be built and need massive amounts of concrete that itself needs months to years to properly cure so that they can store grain in it. And without those facilities, many parts of the world not directly at sea level will suffer and starve.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I think populations will crash, either gently through fewer kids, or violently through war and disease. That will likely throw us backwards technologically, maybe not.

    Or, who knows, maybe the population will stabilize and we get everything going in the right direction, then an asteroid hits.

  • yesman@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    What if the great filter is just when civilizations learn to live sustainably at home? Perhaps the assumption of infinite population growth, resource consumption, and expansion is flawed.

    That’s my optimistic thought for the day.

  • gbzm@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    A year ago I would have said climate change for sure, but now WWIII is making a comeback so it’s up for debate.

    • DarkThoughts@fedia.io
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      3 days ago

      WW3 isn’t going to wipe out humans, just the largest population & production centers and with that society as we know it. Or it will be underwhelming as fuck and nothing major happens before everyone sits back down.

    • mke_geek@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      “The worst threat to man is man himself” Bangambiki Habyarimana, The Great Pearl of Wisdom

  • breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    the very few who have the wealth and power to raise all of humanity, instead choose to hoard it.

    their behaviour and actions will be the eventual end of humanity