We are spawning preachers out of experts, who can say what they like to push their own funding, silence honest critics with money and warp what's considered truth for the rest of us. Still, we have no trouble believing what we want to believe and ignoring the protests of friends, family and even lovers.
A world that will consume us, not because it decides too - but because somewhere a screw came loose and a gear stopped turning. And nobody will have the faintest idea how to fix it.
The issue here is interesting on many levels. Your point of view seems quite realistic, and the facts you present are backed up by some well known data. As I recall it takes about 5,000 people to produce a computer mouse (including the plastic parts, oil needed for producing the plastic, etc.). With it, I would like to approach it from an outlook that takes into account the nature of knowledge and the evolution of our specie in relation to knowledge, and perhaps look at it in a less bleak fashion.
It seems to me that knowledge is a group effort, and has been throughout our evolution as a specie. The advances of our civilization lie heavily on collaboration, and our brains developed in tandem with our socializing nature. I do not see how we can turn that around, however I do think that we need to invest in optimizing and improving our collaborative grid. I find that this stage of our life as specie is shedding more light on that direction, and our technologies are put to work in support of it. Perhaps we need to reconcile to that and participate more actively in it. Taking steps toward maintaining and improving the collaboration and preventing those aspects of our civilization that are threatening this direction (wars, weapons, exploits and lack of care at large).
Another point I find interesting is that human civilization and for that matter, evolution itself, has no guarantee for preserving a particular state of affairs or order. Pressures of all kinds bring about changes. Some catastrophic to the prevailing ones.
We are temporary and have always been that way. Must we be scared? I don’t know, I’d like to think that we accumulated enough knowledge to realize that a future, any future will (1) be different from whatever expectations we might hold and (2) at least in some measures may be affected by our attitudes, actions and imagination.
These two may seem contradictory, but that is part of our reality:)
From my point of view, I know I know nothing, and that in itself is a knowing not new to anyone who takes a good look at life; that doesn’t imply not outreaching myself in partaking in the evolution of knowledge.
Just some thoughts in response to this post. Thanks for putting it out here to incite it.