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The future won't progress. All throughout history writers have embodied their deepest dreams and nightmares in fictional utopias and dystopias. The reality has always been different from either prediction; reality has always been a grey compromise. |
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Last edited by Bonsay; 04-28-2009 at 10:39 PM.
True,it's not true, but it will run out in a long time, and future generations will be screwed when that happens. |
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im back bitches
WakataDreamer's Dreamworld - My DJ
(Very outdated... I'll start a new one when I get some free time)
Project Pandora [B]
~ I'll give this some attention, maybe get it going again some time in the future
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I think you understand the ingenuity of people. Everyone knows oil will run out in the very near future, there are lots and lots of alternatives though. 90% of cars in Brazil don't use a drop of fossil fuels. They're called flex-fuel cars and they are widely available outside of the USA. They run on gasoline, alcohol, or any mixture of the two. In brazil, it's nearly exclusively alcohol. |
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No amount of ingenuity can overcome the fundamental laws of physics. |
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Such as..? |
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there will be wars between major nations and as a result economies will die, nukes will be fired and the world will change as we know it. |
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Well, we'll see pretty soon I reckon. But you really don't seem to understand the issue. It's not about their being no supply at all, it's about demand exceeding supply. That happened by 5% in 71 and War nearly broke out. Imagine what'll happen at 50%... |
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I wasn't planning on keeping petrol engines, and I wasn't saying they should be run by nuclear power plants. We have nuclear engergy technology and a history of majorly advancing our technologies. Our advancement will keep continuing. |
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You are dreaming right now.
We are definitely going to be moving away from oil in the foreseeable future. However, I completely disagree that this will spell the end of modern civilization. |
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The problem is that you can't argue with the physics, specifically the first and second laws of thermodynamics. What do you plan to use for transport? Nuclear power stations? There's only about 40 years of 235 left, too, and that's only at the current rate of use. So what then? Nobody's funding fusion seriously now, and when oil hits the roof nobody will be thinking of it then either, and then the resources will be gone. |
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You remind me of the people who said manned flight is impossible and the later people who said it is guaranteed that humans will never land on the moon. Our species is notorious for coming up with brilliant inventions. I am not worried at all. I would bet my any amount of money that the kind of fusion machine Doc used at the end of Back to the Future will end up being a reality, for example. |
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You are dreaming right now.
We have a president who believes in science now. Congress has already starting putting more funding into alternative energies, including fusion. So has Germany, Japan, and Canada to name the biggest players. It's called the ITER. Even so, I don't think fusion is the future. |
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Last edited by ninja9578; 05-01-2009 at 01:08 AM.
What a red herring. Nobody is trying to argue with the laws of physics. |
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The data about 235 reserves was in some obscure sites but here are two links which estimate it: |
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A couple people have survived that. Sorry to bust your bubble. |
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Last edited by Michael; 05-01-2009 at 02:47 AM.
Which one was that? What kind of answer are you looking for anyway - do you want me to devise a global energy plan? I am not so arrogant as to presume to be able to do this, so quit asking. |
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