Lynas, Mark, Probabilities of worst case scenarios, 80 000 Hours podcast
A weaker version of this hypothesis is that such a collapse isn't inevitable, but is potentially as great an area of concern for longtermists as extinction, due to the 'at a minimum, very difficult' nature of even a single technological reboot[4] combined with the possibility of an increasingly difficult series of collapses and recoveries[5], and/or due to the possibility of a collapsed-and-rebuilt society having much less benign values than our own.[6]
A weaker version of this hypothesis is that such a collapse isn't inevitable, but is potentially as great an area of concern for longtermists as extinction, due to the 'at a minimum, very difficult' nature of even a single technological reboot[4], combined with the possibility of an increasingly difficult series of collapses and recoveries.recoveries[5], or due to the possibility of a collapsed-and-rebuilt society having much less benign values than our own.[6]
Manheim, David (2020) The fragile world hypothesis: complexity, fragility, and systemic existential risk, Futures, vol. 122, pp. 1–8.
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 2.0), published by the Cascade Institute
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 1.1), published by the Cascade Institute
Dartnell, Louis (2015) Out of the ashes, Aeon.
Maher, Timothy M. Jr. & Seth Baum Adaptation to and Recovery from Global Catastrophe, Sustainability, vol. 5, pp. 1461-1479
Townsend, Michael (2022) What We Owe The Future: A review and summary of what I learned - Lesson one: Today’s values could have easily been different, published on the Giving What We Can blog
A weaker version of this hypothesis is that such a collapse isn't inevitable, but is potentially as great an area of concern for longtermists as existential risk,extinction, due to the 'at a minimum, very difficult' nature of even a single technological reboot[4], the possibility of an increasingly difficult series of collapses and recoveries.[5]
The Seshat Databank is a repository of data used to predict possible paths to societal collapse.
A weaker version of this hypothesis is that such a collapse isn't inevitable, but is potentially as great an area of concern for longtermists as existential risk, due to either
The Seshat Databank is a repository of our current values[6] meaning a reboot would potentially leaddata used to a civilisation whose values are much worse.
Manheim, David (2020) The fragile world hypothesis: complexity, fragility, and systemic existential risk, Futures, vol. 122, pp. 1–8.
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 2.0), published by the Cascade Institute
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 1.1), published by the Cascade Institute
Dartnell, Louis (2015) Out of the ashes, Aeon.
Maher, Timothy M. Jr. & Seth Baum Adaptation to and Recovery from Global Catastrophe, Sustainability, vol. 5, pp. 1461-1479
Townsend, Michael (2022) What We Owe The Future: A review and summary of what I learned: Lesson one: Today’s values could have easily been different, published on the Giving What We Can blog
A weaker version of this hypothesis is that such a collapse isn't inevitable, but is potentially as great an area of concern for longtermists as existential risk, due to either
Manheim, David (2020) The fragile world hypothesis: complexity, fragility, and systemic existential risk, Futures, vol. 122, pp. 1–8.
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 2.0), published by the Cascade Institute
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 1.1), published by the Cascade Institute
Dartnell, Louis (2015) Out of the ashes, Aeon.
Maher, Timothy M. Jr. & Seth Baum Adaptation to and Recovery from Global Catastrophe, Sustainability, vol. 5, pp. 1461-1479
Townsend, Michael (2022) What We Owe The Future: A review and summary of what I learned: Lesson one: Today’s values could have easily been different, published on the Giving What We Can blog
A weaker version of this hypothesis is that such a collapse isn't inevitable, but is potentially as great an area of concern for longtermists as existential risk, due to the 'at a minimum, very difficult' nature of even a single technological reboot[4] and the possibility of an increasingly difficult series of collapses and recoveries.[4]5]
[5]Not to be confused with the vulnerable world hypothesis.
Manheim, David (2020) The fragile world hypothesis: complexity, fragility, and systemic existential risk, Futures, vol. 122, pp. 1–8.
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 2.0), published by the Cascade Institute
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 1.1), published by the Cascade Institute
Dartnell, Louis (2015) Out of the ashes, Aeon.
Maher, Timothy M. Jr. & Seth Baum Adaptation to and Recovery from Global Catastrophe, Sustainability, vol. 5, pp. 1461-1479
Dartnell, Louis (2015) Out of the ashes, Aeon.
A weaker version of this hypothesis is that such a collapse isn't inevitable, but is potentially as great an area of concern for longtermists as existential risk, due to the 'at a minimum, very difficult' nature of even a single technological reboot and the possibility of an increasingly difficult series of collapses and recoveries.[4]
[5]Not to be confused with the vulnerable world hypothesis.
Manheim, David (2020) The fragile world hypothesis: complexity, fragility, and systemic existential risk, Futures, vol. 122, pp. 1–8.
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 2.0), published by the Cascade Institute
Lawrence, Michael, Scott Janzwood & Thomas Homer-Dixon (2022) What Is a Global Polycrisis? And how is it different from a systemic risk? (version 1.1), published by the Cascade Institute
Maher, Timothy M. Jr. & Seth Baum Adaptation to and Recovery from Global Catastrophe, Sustainability, vol. 5, pp. 1461-1479
Dartnell, Louis (2015) Out of the ashes, Aeon.
Jebari, Karim (2019), Civilization Re-Emerging After a Catastrophic Collapse, EAGx Nordic presentation
Turchin, Alexey et al (2022) A Pin and a Balloon: Anthropic Fragility Increases Chances of Runaway Global Warming, Effective Altruism Forum