Successfully Predicting The Future

This post is not about Nostradamus, although I have written something about him. It would also be easy to write me off on the strength of what I wrote there, but the approach here is very different and in fact suggested by the opinions of the Zizians and other rationalists. It’s based on probability.

We are first of all aware that the way things were before Trump’s election, the human race was due to die out in the 2060s from respiratory paralysis, along with all reptiles, mammals and fish, the last for other reasons. With the change in policies regarding carbon emissions in the US, that date has now been brought forward, but this is not about that. I now realise that I’ve told you two things this isn’t about.

You might remember my post on the Doomsday Argument (there’s probably more than one) a few years ago. The basic idea behind this is based on an estimate of when the Berlin Wall would come down by someone who visited it in the 1960s. In 1969 CE, when the astrophysicist J Richard Gott III visited the then eight year old Berlin Wall, he posited that the Copernican Principle, that there’s nothing special about a particular observation, individual and so forth, meant that the best assumption about how far through the total number of visitors to the Wall was that he was about halfway through. He gave an estimate of 50/50 that it would be gone by 1993. In fact it came down in 1989, which is quite close. The Doomsday Argument is that from the perspective of an individual human life, one’s birth is best estimated as being about halfway through the total number of human births. With the population growth during the twentieth century of doubling every thirty years and an estimate of the number of human lives being lived so far at seventy five thousand million since 600 000 BP, and taking my own birth in 1967 as an example, it being the only one I can, it appears that the human species will probably be extinct by 2133. There are numerous flaws in this argument, but it’s important to note that it isn’t an argument that overpopulation will cause extinction or that any cause in particular will do so. There will of course be a cause but we don’t seem to be able to tell from this argument what that would be. Nonetheless it is the case that if population growth slows, the prediction extends further into the future and it also depends substantially on assumptions about which entities are likely to have those thoughts, that is, when we became human and started to conceive of the idea of the end of the world, the human race and so forth. In fact, population growth is indeed decelerating and this stretches our probable prospect well into the future. I’ve talked about all of this before, but I think it’s a measure of the occurrence of the thought and not the occurrence of humans. An outbreak of optimism about the future of the human race by the early 22nd century would mean that no more ideas of that kind will occur, or that they’ll be rarer, so maybe what we’re really measuring is the extinction of doomerism, not that of humanity. There are all sorts of reasons why this might happen. It could be that our descendants are all parasitic tumour cells with no brains and therefore no expectations, that we’re all wiped out by AI which doesn’t have that thought or that things are going to get a lot better. Hence this apparently cold mathematical argument has so many hidden variables that it may be worthless.

There is another, similar, argument which I’ve used to predict a future without human space exploration, and it goes like this. Suppose there are a million habitable exoplanets which will one day be within human reach, or alternatively the same area in the form of artificial space habitats of some kind. This is a very conservative estimate as it would mean that only one star system in four hundred thousand would have such a planet or that the technology to produce such habitats is very inefficient. Now suppose that each of these planets (I’ll use the planet settlement scenario for simplicity’s sake) only has an average population of a million, with each such population being considered as a discrete number per century, so for example there are a million people on one such planet and then a century later they’ve died but another million people have replaced them. Suppose this goes on for ten thousand years. That’s 100 x 1 million x 1 million, which is 10¹⁴ people. Going back to the original figure of 7.5 x 10¹⁰ people having lived so far, that makes that a tiny fraction of the number of people who will live in this scenario, namely 0.075%. This means that the probability of living at a time before this has happened, i.e. not being one of these people, is only one in around 1300. These are ridiculous betting odds which nobody rational would risk their money on. Also, the estimate I’ve made is extremely conservative. The Galaxy has been estimated to contain around 300 million habitable planets which will continue to be habitable for on average several hundred million years each and could support a population of ten thousand million people each. If the other scenarios are explored, a much wider variety of stars could support a Dyson swarm, i.e. a roughly spherical shell of space habitats with many times Earth’s land surface area which would dwarf even the second estimate at the order of 10²⁵. If one considers one’s life as a random sample from human history, with these odds it can be guaranteed that if humans settle in space substantially in the future, one would be living during that era and not this one. Our very existence now makes it practically certain it’ll never happen. It doesn’t give the reason for it though.

I actually think this is more productive than the Doomsday Argument, but it’s also flawed. Suppose you consider the much greater probability of being born. The chances of that for each person are lower than one in six hundred thousand million, assuming three hundred ovulations per lifetime and 200 million sperm per ejaculate. This also assumes that our identity depends on genes, which I strongly disagree with, but it’s an interesting thought with substantial basis in reality. It’s still a tiny probability, but even so, every one of us does exist. That probability, incidentally, could perhaps be multiplied by the number of generations since the point at which a single allele could be definitively traced to an individual, which is actually only around sixteen, or by the number of generations since the start of sexual reproduction, although since fish, for example, don’t ovulate single eggs but produce similar numbers of eggs as they do sperm, the numbers get wild before about four hundred million years back. Nevertheless, here we are.

But suppose the argument works. It seems to have predictive power of some kind, although what exactly it predicts is unclear. It might simply mean that we won’t make a Dyson swarm, that distances between stars are too large or even that there isn’t enough phosphorus. It’s also closely coupled to the Fermi Paradox, because whatever stops that from happening may also stop other cultures from doing the same, which is why there are no aliens in contact with us, so maybe we’re about to find out why that is. I personally think it means that something will, or is, happening which will prevent that future from unfolding. It could be something positive. Maybe we will achieve a degree of enlightenment which leads us to stay on our planet and make it an earthly paradise which nobody will want to leave. Or, maybe we’ll just bomb ourselves to bits or die in the ocean acidification scenario, or whatever. Just thinking of this in the wider “where are all the aliens?” setting, it’s also possible that the Great Filter only applies to us because there are no intelligent aliens. Just to spell it out, the Great Filter is the idea that an event takes place everywhere life might be expected to develop and prevents it from getting to the point where intelligent representatives start visiting other star systems. It could be that Earth-like planets are rare, phosphorus is too scarce and vital for life of any kind to develop, there aren’t enough mass extinctions to stimulate evolution, there are usually too many of those for intelligent life to evolve, that intelligent life is just unlikely, that intelligent life is common but tends to develop at the bottom of the ocean, that it’s common but really bad at maths, those all being the past Great Filters, and in the future that AI takes over, we wipe ourselves out through war, pandemics put paid to us, we get too engrossed in online activities to bother and that space exploration is a flash in the pan. There are plenty of others. If there are no spacefarers because there’s no life elsewhere, many of those still apply to us.

Ultimately, we only have the brute fact that we’re intelligent tool using entities which have not colonised the Galaxy. It’s difficult to draw conclusions from that. Lack of information also tend to stimulate speculation too much. Venus is a good example. At some point, astronomers realised that the reason Venus looks so bright is that it’s covered in clouds. They couldn’t see any surface features. Because the only clouds they knew about back then were the ones here on Earth, they drew the erroneous conclusion that Venerean clouds were also made of water vapour, and in fact this is a parsimonious decision because it doesn’t posit that they are made of anything else in the absence of information. From that, they further concluded that Venus must be warm (fair enough, it being near the Sun) and humid, perhaps being covered in swamps, rainforests or just a global water or carbonic acid (fizzy water) ocean. Since at the time it was thought that the planets further from the Sun were older, some scientists also wondered if it was home to dinosaur-like creatures. All this, as Carl Sagan observed by the way, from the fact that you can’t see any surface features through a telescope. Lack of knowledge begets dinosaurs.

We don’t actually know we’re not doing something similar from this lack of knowledge but it’s hard to restrain oneself from trying to fill in the gaps. I want, though, to start from the position that it does seem to be a good argument that this will never happen, for whatever reason. I do think it’d be good if it did, because for example the overview effect influencing a lot of people would make the world a better place. The overview effect is the influence seeing Earth from space has on astronauts, where they begin to see humanity as one and the planet as a precious and delicate place worth preserving. It’s been described as “a state of awe with self-transcendent qualities, precipitated by a particularly striking visual stimulus”. When people have spent some time in space, they come back changed, usually positively so, and actually settling in space, I think, would have a lot of other positive results including those which would promote radical left wing and Green political activism here on Earth, which is why I’m so focussed on it. All that said, it doesn’t follow that it would be a good thing in the end and staying here on Earth and turning our back on all that is seen by many people as a good thing. There’s a pretty good case for this too, as the sums of money and resources spent on space while there are starving people down here. . . well, you know the argument. There’s a famous poster by the artist Kelly Freas from the early 1970s which comes across as being finely balanced in this respect:

Presumed to be copyright NASA and therefore in the public domain but will be removed on request

The motivation behind this picture is to encourage support for the Apollo space program and more widely the space program in general, but I think to a 21st century viewer it comes across as emphasising the problems here and makes the Saturn V seem like a wasteful attempt to escape this and distract the world, along the lines of Gil Scott Heron’s ‘Whitey’s On The Moon’. In other words, the simple possibility that astronauts’ days are numbered can be regarded as a neutral fact rather than utopian or appalling. This still appears to be able to predict the future.

A while ago, I raised questions about the Artemis program. If it’s to be conjectured that a probable result of the return of humans to the lunar surface is a large number of people living in space, which then increases until it outnumbers the population ever having lived on Earth, the probabilistic argument I offered above predicts that that’s unlikely to happen. It could still happen if the number of people in space always stays very small or even if it’s relatively large but short-lived. Something will have to stop this from happening unless it’s along the lines of a pointless publicity stunt. Paradoxically, Elon Musk seems to think that it’s vital for humans to settle on other planets for the sake of the long term survival of the species, and that may well be true but he seems to be very good at preventing that from happening due to incompetence and overreaching himself, plus the mere fact that he’s close to being a (long scale) billionaire (he’s only a billionaire using the American system). To be highly specific, this argument in the current period seems to predict that Artemis will fail. Weirdly, this appears to be a form of retroactive causation — the cause follows the effect. Because one can have a high degree of confidence that there will be no significant human space program in the future, one can conclude that Artemis will fail. It’s as if the failure is caused by the way things are in the future rather than the other way round.

This of course has a Zizian flavour, and more broadly Roko’s Basilisk (don’t look it up – it’s almost certainly wrong but in case it’s right, it’s better not to know what it is). Both of these seem to be examples of the future influencing the past, and that makes it appear to be possible to predict certain aspects of the future. A really obvious one appears to be that time machines which travel back before the first instance of one will never be invented, as if they were we might expect to have witnessed time travellers and we haven’t. There may be some stipulations here, and it’s worthwhile putting in the work to determine exactly what we’re attempting to predict, hence for instance the proviso that they can’t travel back before their first instance. There might be other elements. For instance, it might be that time travel backwards is possible but it kills the time traveller, erases them from ever having come into existence or that it makes them undetectable. We would have to be precise about what we know, but once we’ve reached that precision, we basically have a way of predicting certain facts about the future on our hands and also revealing a weird reverse causality phenomenon. It’s pretty revolutionary in itself that effect can precede cause in some situations.

Something rather similar can be done regarding the present moment and the past. Our existence guarantees that we live in a Universe which is not entirely hostile to intelligent tool using entities, which in our case arose through the appearance and evolution of biochemical life. We also know that Earth formed, is currently habitable, and that there was no time between the appearance of life here and today when it was completely wiped out. However, one thing we don’t know is how improbable it is that we’ve come into existence. Just because we’ve lived on a planet which has been hit by a few comets and asteroids without killing all life on it or been sterilised by a gamma ray burst doesn’t mean that it’s unlikely, because our existence today is a given. That could happen tomorrow for all we know, and there may be nothing keeping the future like the past at all. We just don’t know how precarious our situation is.

I want to talk about something similar now and I don’t quite know how to link it but I’m convinced it’s similar. The past being as it has been in certain ways is assured by “survivorship bias”: we have no option currently but to live in circumstances where we’re still here and where we came into existence. Survivorship bias is a logical error. One example of it is successful guesses made of the psychic test cards with different shapes on them, where a researcher with a large number of subjects might select a subject she thinks is psychic because they’ve guessed correctly each time. Suppose there are 1024 subjects being asked to guess a sequence of cards with one of four symbols on each. Given the null hypothesis, statistically, 256 of them will guess correctly the first time, 64 the second and so on until after five guesses, one person will have done so every time. However, suppose further that there are 1024 of these studies going on in universities all over the world. In this situation, there will be variation in the number of successful guessers and in some of them there will be “super-guessers”, meaning that there can statistically be expected to be one person in the whole group who guesses correctly ten times in a row. Moreover, there’s a twenty-five percent chance that someone will do it eleven times, a chance of one in sixteen that one will do it twelve times and so on, and once it reaches below one in twenty, that reaches the arbitrarily chosen threshold for responsibility and a researcher can publish her result suggesting the statistical significance of guessing in at least one subject thirteen times in a row, and there’s then a danger of that paper receiving all the attention while the papers showing nothing remarkable remain unpublished. This is supposed to be avoided because it distorts the results. Negative findings are as important, if not more so, than positive ones. This is potentially an aspect of academic research which is distorted by a need to be perceived as doing something notable, because it means negative results are buried.

Survivorship bias may influence our perception of how typical our history and planet, and possibly even our universe, are. We’re here, so it follows, for example, that Earth hasn’t recently been hit by a large asteroid and that Covid didn’t wipe us all out – it wasn’t actually that kind of virus anyway, although it could’ve been a lot worse. The fact that the former didn’t happen dictates that the asteroids mainly orbit in a belt far from our orbit rather than us being situated in the middle of an asteroid belt, but it may also be that that kind of solar system is short-lived or rare anyway. We may seem to have lived charmed lives in a sense, and this is where things could be extended into the future.

Quantum immortality is a concept whose scientific respectability has never been clear to me. The idea is that as the timelines branch (I actually don’t think they do branch as such, but that’s not something I want to go into just now), we inevitably end up in the ones where we continue to be conscious. For instance, when I was eight, I rushed out of my primary school and was almost hit by a car, but survived of course. There are, depending on how firm determinism is, other timelines where I was fatally injured, but I’m obviously not in any of those, at least in the current year. In fact I couldn’t be, just given the simple fact that I’m still here typing this. The extension of this thought is that in fact, none of us ever die, and in fact our consciousnesses never end, not just subjectively but in terms of continuing to survive as observed by others. Every time a potentially consciousness-terminating event occurs, we take the road where our consciousness continues. Note that I’m talking about the permanent cessation of consciousness here, since we’re clearly temporarily unconscious on a regular basis during dreamless sleep. Hence the idea is that subjectively each of us will never die. A way of linking it to quantum ideas more clearly is to imagine a machine gun which works like the Schrödingers Cat thought experiment, except that the radioactive particle is replaced by a radioactive sample whose decay gives the firing of each bullet a 50% chance of happening, one bullet per second. The subject sits in front of the gun, aimed at their head. Subjectively, the gun will never fire because there will then be no observer to be aware of the bullets not firing, and of course the death of the observer would mean there is no such observer. This is rather sloppily put together but I hope you get my point. After five minutes the gun has potentially fired up to three hundred times and the probability of it not having fired is equivalent to one against a number more than three hundred thousand times greater than the number of atoms in the observable Universe, so it can be almost guaranteed that no-one else not in the firing line will observe the victim still alive at the end of the five minute period, but for the “victim” the situation is one hundred percent safe. Of course, somewhere out there in the Multiverse there is someone who has the reputation of being fantastically fortunate. Other people exist.

Extending this to every event while keeping the quantum component, it’s easy to imagine that each timeline begins with a quantum event which ends up determining the whole future in that timeline until it’s observed, and since it has to keep being observed, there has to be at least one immortal being in each. This means that in the majority of universes, which appear often to be merely composed of hydrogen rather sparsely distributed throughout space, there are no observers and therefore they actually don’t exist, although this would be countered by either panpsychism or the existence of an omniscient deity. I am of course panpsychist myself. A more conventional way of understanding it is that you are immortal in any timeline you actually experience. The bullet misses you, the car crash isn’t fatal, you recover from the infection and your cancer goes into remission.

However, this is not a recipe for ceasing to worry about the future. If you’ve read ‘Gulliver’s Travels’, you’ll know about the Struldbrugs of Luggnagg, who are born with a red dot above their left eyebrows which changes colour until it’s black. Swift obviously did a better job than I’m about to, so you can read his own words on them here. It’s in Chapter Ten. It won’t surprise you to learn their immortality is not a blessing but a curse. The condition’s not hereditary and a baby of this kind is only born every few years in the whole country. Lemuel imagines Struldbrugs to be mentally liberated from the prospect of death and able to become extremely wise, passing on their wisdom to the younger generations as a positive jewel to the land. However, what they actually do is serve as a dreadful warning to the populace which makes them feel relieved that they’re mortal, as their presence is a constant reminder of old age. They have, as the phrase has it, years in their lives but no life in their years, because they continue to age despite being immortal. Just as the old in our society tend to be world-weary, think they know more than they do and have contempt for the young (don’t shoot the messenger – this is Swift talking here, not me), they have all the more vices owing to their knowledge that they’ll never die. They’re ” not only opinionative, peevish, covetous, morose, vain, talkative, but incapable of friendship, and dead to all natural affection”, and they don’t care about any of their descendants beyond their grandchildren. They’re mainly envious and frustrated, and basically wish they were dead the whole time, lamenting at funerals because they know they’ll never have that release, and past the age of eighty, if they’re married to each other the state mercifully dissolves their union out of compassion, because otherwise their marriage will become a living hell out of being totally sick of each other. They’re also declared dead at eighty in order that their heirs can inherit and although they are either allowed to continue on a pittance from their own estate or receive welfare, they can’t own property or even rent it. Any diseases of old age continue, though they don’t get worse, and due to changes in language, after about two hundred years they cease to be able to hold any conversations with people outside their generation, who in any case are very few, and they also have dementia.

Swift wasn’t the only person to make this observation, although this is of course typical of him. There’s also an ancient Greek myth about Τιθωνός, lover of Eos, who scooped up a handful of sand and was granted to live as many years as there were grains in his hands, but forgot to ask for eternal youth and ended up walled up in a room insane until he was mercifully turned into a cicada. There’s also an Asimov story, ‘The Last Trump’, where the dead and the living are given eternal life and youth and initially suppose they’re in paradise but soon realise that they’re damned and that eternal life will become unbearably boring. They’re then reprieved on a technicality when an angel points out that the date of resurrection is different in different calendars, so it can’t have been a proper doomsday.

For this is what quantum immortality is. You don’t die, and you remain conscious, but you also deteriorate without end so your life becomes unbearable. It’s also entirely compatible with dementia to some extent. You don’t need a good memory, only to be able to sense things in one way or another, perhaps with the last remaining cone cell in one retina. Perhaps you occasionally notice a red dot and then forget about it immediately. It isn’t good, really. In fact it wouldn’t even be good if you retained all your faculties because your life would be poisoned by boredom and over-familiarity.

This raises a few questions. One is that of what ageing actually is. In a sense, not all organisms do actually age or die of old age. There’s a species of petrel, a bird, which is effectively immortal, and a jellyfish who responds to injury by regressing to infancy and beginning to mature again. However, these are not in fact immortal. Both, for example, would die in a fire or if eaten by a predator, and this raises the question of what ageing actually is. Is it the accumulation of internal insults and health problems which eventually proves fatal? If so, it’s effectively the same as accidental death – it’s just that the accidents are things like oxidative stress, cardiovascular deterioration or cancer. Or, do we have an allotted span such that we die after a certain number of years determined by an internal clock? This clearly does affect many species which die immediately after reproducing, which is just as well because otherwise they would use up the resources needed by their children, who would then starve, or end up eating their children shortly after hatching. Some might say that this is what one current generation of humans in positions of wealth and power is actually doing right now. We hang around for our children and grandchildren, but on the whole we need to die to get out of the way for future generations.

Presumably with quantum immortality, the former scenario is assumed to be in play. We don’t have an inherent life expectancy, but simply accumulate injuries until they become fatal, but in each subjective case those injuries never end up killing us. Obviously we’re not surrounded by immortals, so each of us has their own private world in this scenario, dying in an increasing number of timelines but persisting in a dwindling number of them, which, however, never reaches zero. One major problem with this is that it seems to be solipsistic, as all the “people” around you are still mortal and are just shadows with no consciousness. You’re in your own world. This may, however, have a form of retrocausality too. For instance, two ways of living longer are to be lucky with your genes and to inherit or adopt health-promoting attitudes from your family or community, meaning that you are, for example, more likely to have particularly healthy and long-lived relatives in your personal timeline. This doesn’t rule out straightforwardly accidental death, but it does mean you’re likely to have selected long-lived relatives. Therefore, if you believe in quantum immortality it would often be reasonable to conclude that your relatives, while not immortal, might end up living a particularly long time or be especially healthy in old age. It might even go further than that, with the possibility of living a relatively charmed life in a stable political environment, free from local wars and famines for example, or with a particularly low rate of serious crime.

This raises an ethical problem. It could make you complacent. You’d know that everyone else was subjectively immortal and also that you’ll never encounter potentially fatal dangers. Therefore you might well be less motivated to do good to others or even particularly bother to look after yourself. In the initial example, you could just wander in front of the quantum machine gun secure in the knowledge that you’ll be unharmed despite the increasingly vast odds against that being so. But you and others still wouldn’t have life in your years, and that would be worth preserving. It’s a heady prospect, but probably not a good one because you might stop caring about those affected by the troubles and hardships of the world, although suffering would still exist, more in fact than it does if we’re mortal.

Hugh Everett was a prominent proponent of this idea, although I have to say it’s a fairly obvious one so I doubt he was the first. He was the first well-known theorist of the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics, which is the apparently branching paths (in fact they’d probably always have existed but be indiscernible) idea of innumerable parallel universes forking at each probabilistic event. He believed he would never die because of this. From our perspective, he is in fact dead, although this may not have any bearing on whether he’s immortal as if he was right, he would be “elsewhere”: we just happen to live in one of the majority of universes where he is in fact deceased. He died suddenly of a heart attack on 19th June 1982 at the age of fifty-one, having smoked sixty a day, consumed excessive alcohol and being grossly obese, never exercised and never went to the doctor. His son was very angry with him after his death that he never took care of himself, although he also observed that he just did what he wanted without interference and then just died without withholding any pleasures from himself. He also wanted to be cremated and have his ashes thrown out with the rubbish, something his widow wasn’t keen on for a few years after his death but eventually complied with. Incidentally, if you know the band The Eels, that’s the son who commented thus and there’s an album inspired by his death. Of course, this album doesn’t really exist because Hugh Everett is immortal! It seems to me that this kind of self-neglect may have resulted precisely from his belief in quantum immortality – there’s simply no point in looking after your health in his view.

I’m not sure this follows, to be honest. I think that apart from anything else you probably would want to be healthy for as long as possible in order to enjoy life, and also to spare the feelings of people close to you. Also, what if you’re wrong? I don’t think many people who have recently touched grass, as the phrase has it, would willingly step in front of that machine gun. Certain persons, of course, haven’t done that recently.

The Doomsday Argument and Quantum Immortality feel like they’re from the same stable, so it’s worthwhile working out what they have in common. They both start from a kind of Descartes-like position of noting that one is currently conscious and attempting to draw conclusions from that bare fact, though unlike Descartes they neither raise the possibility that the physical world doesn’t exist nor that God does, which gives them greater traction on the consensus view of reality and the Universe. Both constrain the Universe through the fact that we’re observing it, like the anthropic principle that the Universe must have certain physical constants and laws to produce conscious beings. Both involve vast numbers of items. In the Doomsday Argument, this is everyone who has or will ever live, and in Quantum Immortality it’s the number of possible worlds in which one has existed or currently exists. In fact I don’t believe the many worlds are strictly separate but that’s an argument for another time. Oddly though, they draw opposite conclusions from their reasoning. The Doomsday Argument concludes we’re all going to die but Quantum Immortality decides each of us is individually, though perhaps unhealthily, immortal, and that our consciousness will never permanently end. Neither of them are amenable to observational testing. The former can’t be observed by human scientists because it says there won’t be any, and the latter can only be observed by all the lonely people, but individually.

Another significant concept linked to both of these is Roko’s Basilisk, which we cannot talk about. A fourth one is the Simulation Argument. This is an argument which has been popular with Elon Musk but doesn’t seem to work. This is that we are much more likely to be living in a simulation than the real world because any civilisation which existed for long enough and became advanced in computing will eventually decide to simulate the world. Those simulated worlds will then simulate other worlds when their own simulations are sophisticated enough to do so, and so forth. This would mean that of all instances of apparently real worlds, almost all are simulated. This argument compared to the others seems almost trivially easy to refute. Firstly, taking it at face value this means a cascading tree of simulations, each generation more numerous than the last and also more simplistic and therefore less realistic due to lack of computing power, so the fact that the universe is more complex than it might be means we aren’t in the most numerous types of simulation, so why would we be in a simulation at all? Secondly, again taking it at face value, the three-body problem and beyond can in most cases eat up all available computing resources. I actually don’t think this argument works because in the non-special cases a pseudorandom number generator could just be used to prevent this from happening and the chances are nobody would be any the wiser, since the movements of the large number of bodies is in fact unpredictable. I suppose this could be tested by looking at one’s own simulations of three-body problems using various pseudorandom generator algorithms or for that matter true randomness. But beyond all this, the really big assumption seems to be that any civilisation would inevitably end up bothering to simulate the world in the first place. As I’ve said before, apart from anything else they might just be really bad at maths, and with anything else maybe they’ve got more important things to do.

All of these seem to have a self-centred element to them. There’s also an arrogance to them, in that they boldly assert that the person proposing or learning of them has taken everything into consideration and nothing can assail the argument. The Simulation Argument is obviously full of holes, but the holes are the blind spots of a probably autistic sociopath in that the assumption is that just because one person or a group of people working in a particular field would try to do this, thereby incidentally becoming a God to the sims, everyone else would, regardless of their personality or neurodiversity. Quantum Immortality and the Simulation Argument both seem to leave us with “non-player characters”, i.e. zombie shells of people who aren’t really conscious and don’t really matter, so that’s sociopathy and lack of empathy again. They seem to provide an excuse to ignore people’s needs. The Doomsday Argument assumes that humans all contemplate the end of the world or the human race and are all that matters, rather than it being the thought of the end of the world which is significant. There needs to be a cut-off point or certainty that we are the only conscious beings in the Universe for it to work.

In the end, although these arguments are interesting I think they really say more about the people who think of them than the actual world they’re supposed to be applied to. I do think that something will prevent the Artemis Project from succeeding, and that is because of the future galactic civilisation thing, but there could be really positive reasons why it won’t. As for the others, well, they all have a kind of solipsistic and self-centred air to them which it doesn’t seem healthy to entertain. But who knows? Maybe there are other kinds of argument of this nature which do have real predictive power, and if there are that would be fascinating and also useful.

Artemis And Doomsday

Right now, the chances are that everyone reading this is a basic human like me, living on Earth, or at an outside chance, in low Earth orbit (who am I kidding‽). Consider that condition. What are the chances that that’s what you are if human life goes on and our descendants fan out into the Galaxy? I’ve gone into this many times of course, and the Doomsday Argument, as this is called, is flawed, but it’s worth going into it again for the purposes of applying it to the situation in which the human race finds itself today.

I’ll just recap briefly. There was a guy who visited the Berlin Wall in the 1960s and predicted that it would come down at approximately the time it did through estimating the probability of where he was in the total number of visitors to the Wall, using only probability, statistics and the time since it had been put up. His name was Brandon Carter, and he later applied a similar argument to estimating how long the human race has left based on the assumption that one is about half way through the total number of human births. When I did this calculation based on my own date of birth, the 1977 CE estimate that 75 thousand million people had been born before me, which covered the past six hundred millennia and a doubling period somewhere around three decades, as it was at the time, it gave me the result that the last human birth would take place around 2130. There are various silly aspects to this argument. For instance, if Adam existed and had made this calculation just before Eve appeared, he would conclude that the human race would be most likely to end with Eve’s death. By the way, I am not fundamentalist and therefore do not believe Eve and Adam ever existed. I just want to make that clear.

Although this is not a particularly marvellous argument, I do think a similar one works fairly well in one particular area, as I’ve mentioned before. It does in fact seem fair to assume the principle of mediocrity about one’s own existence. In that respect, it’s fair to assume I’m a typical example of a human and have been born at a time when prevailing conditions are “normal”, i.e. that the fact that I find myself living at a time when we have only ever lived on one planet and are not cyborgs to a greater extent than Donna Haraway claims. Transhumanism is not the usual human condition and there are neither orbiting space colonies nor settlements on other worlds. If we even settled ten other worlds they would only need a population over the whole period humans dwelt on them about equivalent to the current population of this planet for us to be outnumbered, and that’s a very modest estimate of how human history would unfold if we began to live elsewhere than on this planet. It would be more likely for there to be numerous settlements, either in the form of space stations or people living on other habitable planets. Say there were a million planets settled, which is still a conservative estimate for the number of suitable planets in the Milky Way, and they were settled for only a thousand years each. That’s an æon of human life on other planets. For it to be more probable for us to be here now than there then, it would need the population on each of those planets to average out at less than seven dozen. That is clearly absurd, so we have to conclude that as a species we will never settle on any other planets or build any permanent space habitats, or that our existence here and now just happens to be fantastically impossible.

For this to be the case, we have to conclude that our efforts to go into space are also only ever going to be very minor to non-existent, something which is confirmed right now by the fact that only twelve people have ever visited another celestial body. Even that was difficult because one crew didn’t make it. Now we’re supposed to try again with the Artemis Project, the current plan to go back to where Apollo went. Incidentally, I’ve long thought that one of the issues with the conspiracy theory is that getting there is only equivalent to going round the world ten times. Patrick Moore had a car which had gone further than twice that distance, and the average flight crew probably notch that up in a couple of weeks. Not that it wasn’t an amazing achievement. But humanity didn’t go on to do anything else afterwards, is the issue.

We’re confronted with a problem in the current moment then. It’s looking like there will be more people walking about up there in a couple of years, but if that happens it looks suspiciously like this version of the Doomsday Argument will have been refuted. But before I go there, I want to talk about Brooke Bond.

In 1971, Brooke Bond brought out a series of collector’s cards on the Space Race which started with Sputnik 1 (let’s Russ that up a little: Спутник-1) and proceeded through the various early satellites, planetary missions and the like up to Apollo and then past into the future. I collected the cards and got the book to stick them in. It must’ve been 1971 because it had the pound marked in both shillings and “p”, and they only did that in that year if I recall correctly. Anyway, it was from this publication that I learnt of the plan to send a human mission to Mars via Venus launching in the late ’70s. I remember looking at the years and thinking “1979” and “1980” looked really strange and futuristic, like the numbers on the public library date stamp which had yet to be used. But yes, there was a tentative plan at that point to send astronauts to Venus and Mars which everyone seems to have forgotten. There have in fact been a very large number of such proposals, but I didn’t know that at the time:

Actually, looking at this I realise I got it the wrong way round. They were going to visit Mars first and then do a Venus flyby. My confusion arises from the fact that there were so many different plans to do this. The Russians even considered a Venus mission to be launched in the early 1960s. I remember eagerly awaiting this, in full expectation that it would happen, and the dates passing with nothing to show for them, and how disillusioning it all was. This was a feature of my life at the time. When they found CFCs were destroying the ozone layer and that carbon dioxide emissions were causing climate change, I was convinced that they’d just go, “right, lets take the fluorocarbons out of aerosols and stop using fossil fuels”, and it’s the same kind of disappointment, from which you can see that I wasn’t your typical space nerd or environmental activist, because I suspect rather few people were equally enthusiastic about Green politics and astronautics, but that’s who I am. There is a seamless disappointment there. It’s all part of my same imaginary world, and it was very hard to cope with at the time. I can’t believe how slowly everything except IT progresses, and it’s also weird that IT did advance that quickly compared to everything else. I have certain theories about that, not conspiracy theories but something else, which I’ll leave for another time.

The space-based Doomsday Argument, which I’m going to call “Space Doomsday”, can easily explain why this didn’t happen, although maybe “why” is the wrong word here. The immediate reason the Mars mission didn’t happen was budgetary cuts to NASA in 1970. However, considering our lives as a relatively random sample of human history, we are aware that it’s improbable that human space exploration will ever make much progress, or we probably wouldn’t be here sitting on this single planet where we originated. It’s possible but improbable. The idea that we will in fact end up doing this isn’t ruled out by the fact. It’s similar to the idea that if you have lung cancer, you have probably been a long-term tobacco smoker. That’s something you can reasonably conclude about someone’s previous life given their current condition, although it may also be that they got it from passive smoking or asbestos exposure, for example. It isn’t a dead cert, but it’s probable. Hence it’s probable that something would happen to prevent people from landing on Mars, assuming of course that the expansion into space follows such activities, and in that sense Space Doomsday has predictive power, or perhaps forecasting power. We know we’re here on Earth, so we can reasonably believe the human race does not have a spacefaring future. A slightly less reasonable conclusion is that there will be no human missions to other celestial bodies in our future.

This could potentially lead to a weird version of “Moonlanding” denial conspiracy theory. Obviously I accept humans landed on Cynthia six times owing to not being delusional in that respect, but suppose Artemis happens. I am wedded to the idea that humans will never go there again because of Space Doomsday, so if they do go there I’m tempted to deny that due to it not fitting in with my world view, and the same applies to any planned Mars mission. Am I perhaps a tinfoil hat conspiracy theorist in the making? If someone believed in Space Doomsday in the 1960s, would they have ended up denying the Apollo missions were real? If the news that Artemis does succeed appears in the media and we see pictures from the lunar surface and the rest, it’s fair to conclude that we probably have gone there in a second batch of missions, but one’s belief in Space Doomsday could be so strong that it would lead to K-skepticism. For me, that would be motivated by depressive thinking, but others might have more positive reasons for doubt, such as the idea that it isn’t appropriate for so much money and resources to be spent on space missions when there are enough problems on this planet to be addressed.

Speaking of this planet, there could be a link between these two major sources of disappointment emanating from my childhood. Alternative futures are possible from these. In one, we simply don’t go into space much. Perhaps robotic probes become ever more sophisticated, take over from us, and colonise the Galaxy themselves, or maybe there’s just no impetus to do so and we all become more focussed on whatever’s going on down here. This is a relatively positive future compared to the other one, which is that this apparent lack of concern for environmental disaster simply wipes out the human race in a few years, before anyone gets the chance to go to Mars. This chimes with the apparent, though egocentric, forecast that the last human birth will occur around 2130.

The interesting thing about Space Doomsday is that it seems to have predictive power. For instance, it predicts that there will be a reason why nobody will go to Mars or the Artemis project won’t come to fruition. In fact, Artemis has indeed met with problems. The plan is for at least eight missions, the first two of which won’t involve a lunar landing. Artemis I is an unoccupied test of the spacecraft which will orbit Cynthia and return, splashing down on Earth, next year (2022). Artemis II happens the year after and involves a crew orbiting Cynthia, which would be the first time anyone has left cis lunar space since 1972. 2024 is expected to see humans back on the surface for the first time since Apollo, and a series of missions after that will involve building a lunar base for permanent habitation. This looks like the point of no return for human settlement in space, although it might just not happen or not go any further. But in order to be “scientific” about this, I need to define exactly what I mean by the statement that humans will never settle on other worlds or establish a permanent presence in space. That initial statement looks wrong for a start because of the International Space Station, which is a permanent presence. Otherwise, I’m moving the goalposts, and I might say after Artemis I, “well I never said the hardware wouldn’t work” or after Artemis II, “well I never said nobody would ever leave cis lunar space again” and so on. I need to be more precise, and base it on evidence.

My claim is based on the idea that the total number of human births is likely to be at most 150 thousand million. More than this and the chances of living now rather than later in history fall below fifty percent. In fact, therefore, it’s possible to forecast from this position that the total population of space will always be less than seventy five thousand million minus the population still on this planet. In fact if it were ever close to being that high, that would seem to herald the extinction of the human species for probability-related reasons, which suggests further that there will never be self-sufficient space colonies or that some perhaps solar-related disaster will befall life in this Solar System.

Artemis is supposed to lay the foundations for the eventual exploration of Mars. This in itself means it’s unlikely to succeed, not because that’s over-ambitious but because it means it does in fact appear to be a stepping stone to people living permanently off Earth, which either can’t happen or is likely to end in disaster, or at best peter out. Hence it can be expected that there will be major snags in the program. Now it’s difficult to tell whether I’m seeing patterns where there are none, as any major long-term complicated undertaking is likely to meet with the occasional problem. Thinking again of our hypothetical Space Doomsday person living in the ’60s, they might focus on the Apollo I fire and the Apollo XIII disaster as signs that it wasn’t going to work, that there would turn out, for example, to be insurmountable safety obstacles to strapping three guys into a seat on top of a hundred metre column of high explosive. I mean, who’d’ve thought it? But there were six successful missions as well as more successful translunar incursions (excursions?). It is probably true, speaking from my deeply uninformed position, that the risks taken on those missions were much higher than they would be today, and presumably are on the Artemis program, but maybe not. I confess to not paying much attention to Artemis because I don’t want to be disappointed again, so I don’t know much about it.

There are sound economic reasons for returning, including the presence of metals such as titanium more easily accessible than here and, if fusion ever happens, and that’s another thing which seems infinitely deferred, helium-3 in the soil, and water is now known to be available, in the form of ice in the parts of polar craters in permanent shadow, freeing a base from the necessity of a water supply from Earth. It was detected by the Clementine mission in March 1996, in Shackleton Crater.

The spacesuits for Artemis have been delayed, it was announced this August. This will prevent a 2024 landing, since they won’t be ready until April 2025 at the earliest. That puts it later than the next presidential election, and if for example Trump is re-elected, which unfortunately is still possible it seems, he could cancel the program before then. The current space suits are not intended to be used for extensive periods on the lunar surface, hence the need for new ones. One reason for the delay is budget cuts and another is the pandemic. But you could look at it, rather unscientifically, as a curse or fate. There is reason to deduce that something will always stop it happening because it’s possible that we can be confident nobody will ever go there again or to Mars at all. The details of the cause are apparently not available, but right now they seem to include Trump, the pandemic and budget cuts.

The Artemis program involves the building and transport of infrastructure and equipment separately from the crewed missions. This is a factor in its demise. If it was just about astronauts visiting without setting up a permanent base, it could well go ahead as that’s a less significant step in establishing a foothold elsewhere in the Solar System. Hence the crewed lunar orbital mission is more likely to happen, although this is also a step on the way. It would also be more likely to happen if it wasn’t supposed to be a preliminary to going to Mars. There was a plan, decades ago, for the first astronaut to arrive to start putting together a permanent lunar base, which it’s possible to predict wouldn’t happen for the same reason.

I’m not going to deny that a lot of this post is motivated by depressive thinking, although I’m not actually depressed just now. To counter that, I want to point out that depressive realism helps one perceive unpleasant truths, one of which appears to be that our descendants are trapped on this planet forever. And I’m not even saying that Earth is not a wonderful and beautiful place. It’s for this exact reason that humans should move many of their activities, and for that matter bodies, into space, off this planet, to preserve it and allow it to recover. Moreover, there was always going to be positive fallout from space travel, such as the Overview Effect, the Spaceship Earth concept, the discovery of the possibility of nuclear winter, the reminder Venus gives us of how easily climate change can get out of hand, not to mention the various technological benefits. Nonetheless, some people would see being stuck here as a positive thing, and it has positie aspects. It means, for example, that there is no escape from the effects of pollution, reduced biodiversity and anthropogenic climate change, except that maybe there is for the rich and powerful but not the poor and oppressed.

So wouldn’t it be nice if we had a lunar base, went to Mars and built space colonies for the people left here on Earth?

Why The End Might Not Be Nigh

Yesterday’s post, as well as being mistitled, was probably quite depressing, although that depends on your view of human extinction since many people don’t consider that to be a bad thing. As a kind of antidote, I’ve decided today to offer a more encouraging view of our future, assuming that you consider the continued existence of the human race as positive. I’ve covered the Doomsday Argument before, but did it in quite an idiosyncratic manner, concentrating on my own thoughts about its possible flaws. This post is more an outline and survey of the Doomsday Argument and its rebuttals.

The Doomsday Argument has its origins in the astrophysicist Richard Gott’s visit to the Berlin Wall in 1969. The Wall began to be built in 1961 and Gott visited it eight years later. After speculating about how long it would be there, he did a quick calculation, and I get the impression this was mental arithmetic, and reached the conclusion that it would be demolished some time between 2⅔ and two dozen years after that date in 1969. In fact it came down in 1991, twenty-one years later. This provoked him to publish his calculation in a scientific paper in 1993 where he applied the same calculation to the history of the human race, concluding with 95% confidence that we would cease to exist between twelve and eighteen millennia from 1993. This is of course quite a big range, but it’s notable to me that the Berlin Wall came down towards the end of that period.

The Berlin Wall version of the argument is the original and has also succeeded in predicting its demise, and is therefore worth looking at closely. A random visitor to the Berlin wall will be there at some point in its history. It’s likely that Gott visited the Wall some time between 25% and 75% of the way through its duration, because that’s half of its history, so a steady stream of visitors would put them somewhere in that interval half of the time. If they then make a prediction about when it will come down, the most confident period would be that it would last between a third and three times as long as it had been in existence, because they can believe fairly confidently that they’re between a quarter and three-quarters of the visitors in chronological order (more than 50% probability) and therefore it will last somewhere between a third as long again (if they’re at 75%) and three times as long again (if they’re at 25%).

Now apply that to human history. It might at first seem that it predicts that if anatomically modern humans came into existence around 300 000 years ago, we would continue to exist for between a hundred millennia and getting on for a million years, again with 95% confidence, which should be taken as read from now on. This doesn’t work quite the same way though. Visitors to the Berlin Wall were assumed, fairly reasonably, to have occurred at a roughly constantly frequency according to Gott’s argument, but the same doesn’t apply to the whole human population, which increases exponentially. Therefore it isn’t about where in history you are chronologically so much as the order of your birth among all the human births that will ever be. The figures I use for my version of the argument are the population of the planet in about 1970, my own birth in 1967, the figure of all human lives up until 1970 quoted at the time and a thirty-year doubling time. The population at that time was around 3000 million and the estimate at that time was 75 000 million. Given that figure of 3 000 million, 6 000 million would be the population by 2000, 12 000 million by 2030, 24 000 million by 2060 and 48 000 million by 2090. It reaches 96 000 million by 2120 at this rate of doubling, meaning that the last birth could be said to occur by that time at 50% probability assuming that everyone born in 1970 was still alive, but earlier than that otherwise because there would’ve been more human lives. We can assume, for example, that almost everyone born in 2000 would be dead by 2120, the figure only needs to go as high as 150 000 million in toto anyway, and so on. But the figures work out as between 25 000 million and 225 000 million further births after 1967 given these rather inaccurate figures, which place the earliest time before 2060 and the latest before the end of next century. You will gather from my vagueness that I can’t do calculus. Or look at it this way: if everyone who ever lived considered the question of whether they were in the first or second half of the number of human births which will ever be, almost half will be correct. (It’s possible that there is an exact “middle” birth if the total number of people who will ever live is odd rather than even.)

Most people agree that this argument is flawed, and I’ve previously mentioned my own objections to it, but there are superficial and deeper causes of the flaws. The superficial reasons for the above figures are that they’re sloppy and inaccurate. Population doubling time has been quoted at between twenty-eight and thirty-five years during the period it was widely considered a major concern, and adjusting for those moves the dates to between 2054 and 2225. It also turned out that the doubling rate fell recently and that economic development reduces the size of families, so it’s been estimated, and again this is an old figure, that the world population will stabilise at eighteen millard (thousand million) in the mid-twenty-second century, which gives us centuries to go. A rather less superficial argument is based on selecting my own birthdate, because the argument can be made for anyone who has ever had this thought, and therefore there could easily be a prediction thousands of years ago that puts us way beyond the latest 95% confidence limit today. The argument is equally valid no matter whose life you use as an example. The date changes as time passes. If someone had made the prediction about the Berlin Wall in 1990, the lower bound of their confidence interval would’ve been in 2000.

But there are other problems with the argument which are not to do with these details or even applying it to human extinction. Before I go into them, I want to make two observations. Firstly, there’s a tendency for people who do believe in its validity to dismiss other’s (go on, ask me about that apostrophe, I dare you!) arguments as indicating that they haven’t understood it properly. Secondly, although it’s widely agreed that it’s invalid, the reasons are multiple, and people who believe it’s invalid for one reason often don’t agree with the other reasons given. This complicates things.

One objection to the argument is that it assumes nothing is known about where one is in human history. It seems to make sense to flip a coin if one is asked the question “was your birth in the first or second half of the total number of human lives?” and go with that answer only if one believes the coin to be fair. If one knows it isn’t fair and will always come up heads, it’s no longer rational to choose tails. If anything relevant can be known about our place in history, it changes the odds. For instance, it could be discovered that there was a correlation between the prevalence, lethality and spread of pandemics on the one hand and the level of population on the other which would make it very likely that a population above ten billion would lead to human extinction within an average human lifespan, in which case as soon as it hit that number and stayed there for seventy years or so, our demise was guaranteed. I don’t personally like this argument because I can’t think of anything which is that reliable which is relevant to human survival. I believe that we are in fact in ignorance, partly because measures might be taken to prevent the apocalypse once its likelihood had been calculated. On the other hand, that might be optimistic given how keen everyone seemed to be, for example, on ignoring the finding that pandemics were in fact much more likely to happen in current circumstances.

There’s also a converse argument which goes like this. The more intelligent life forms which will ever exist, the more likely it is that I exist. There are various ways in which my existence, like everyone else’s, is improbable, and the combination of traits which lead to someone like me existing becomes increasingly probable the more people there will ever be. If there are going to be 200 thousand million people, the chances of someone like me existing might be ten percent – nine out of ten possible worlds with 200 thousand million people in their history don’t have me in them. But if there are going to be 200 billion in that scenario, a thousandfold greater, each world would end up having around a hundred examples of someone like me in its history somewhere.

Here’s another argument, and I may have got this wrong. The Doomsday Argument is an early example of other similar arguments. One of these is the argument that the human species will never substantially settle anywhere off Earth because if there were, for instance, fifty million habitable worlds in the Galaxy and each had a population of a million with a life expectancy of a century for a millennium, all of which are very conservative assumptions, the probability of living before that era is only 0.015%. There are other similar arguments. Therefore there is a sense in which those who are aware of this argument are early adopters. They’re like the people who bought the bug-prone version of a new gadget who were used as guinea pigs by the manufacturer, and therefore the argument they accept is likely to be less sophisticated and more flawed than its successors. We could be working towards a more successful predictor of the future than this argument, and since we’re aware that it only has a short history, we probably have the wrong one. This sounds peculiar to me, which is why I think I might have got it wrong.

We could also be early humans. It might be that the fact that we’re human-basic rather than transhuman is an argument for us not being very advanced in history. We don’t currently augment our bodies much internally, but the technology to make that possible is already in its infancy and will become more advanced. The fact that we don’t download music directly to our brains yet, unlike practically everyone who will be born more than two centuries from now, is evidence that we are unusual.

The fact that mass extinctions only seldom happen has also been used. This is again a probabilistic argument, and can be modified to refer to individual dominant biological taxa. But there seem to have been six mass extinction events in the past 540 million years, so the chances of us being in one are small. Whereas I think that’s valid, it clearly isn’t true because we are in fact in the middle of one right now, probably related to our activity. But dominant species are said only to go extinct about once in a million years, so that’s another odds-based argument for this not being a threat.

Another objection is based on the St Petersburg Paradox. Suppose you bet on a coin coming up heads, and every time the coin is flipped and doesn’t, your winnings double. The expected winning is infinite even though intuition suggests that it will in fact be small compared to how much you put in, because the probability of losing halves with every flip. The rational choice would therefore appear to be to place all your money on the game. I may not be following this argument correctly, but it seems to relate to each generation of human existence being a toss-up between being the last and not being the last, and in the same way, the expected number of human beings is infinite. To be honest this makes no sense to me and I’m not sure I’ve expressed it correctly.

Carlton Caves has offered this example as a rebuttal. Imagine you encounter someone whose fiftieth birthday is today. By the logic of the Doomsday Argument, they have a one in three chance of living to one hundred and fifty. I see this as referring to the idea of having special knowledge, because we know that nobody seems to have lived more than about ten dozen years.

A little like the early adopter argument, there is a self-referential counter-argument. The Doomsday Argument was thought of fairly recently. Including the Berlin Wall calculation, it’s currently four dozen and two years old. Therefore, it is likely to be refuted some time between sixteen and one gross and a half dozen years from now, in other words 2037 and 2171. However, if this argument for its refutation works, it means the Doomsday Argument is valid, which is a paradox. This, though, is problematic because it assumes that the argument can be disproven, which may not be so.

I haven’t found this to be a particularly satisfactory post because I’m not feeling on top of the arguments. Attempts to disprove the Doomsday Argument are very popular and the whole field is rather confusing to a non-mathematician such as myself. That said, if you look at my other post on this topic, you’ll see my own reasons for doubting it. Unfortunately though, or perhaps unfortunately, merely disproving the argument itself doesn’t prevent the possibility that we will soon be extinct. Tomorrow I plan to talk about that.

Utopia Is A Necessary Evil

I don’t want to turn this into a mere tit-for-tat argument between the two of us having this discussion on here, but I value the input of people who comment on my blog, so I’m going to address something here which has been bugging me for a long time. It’s to do with the nature of utopia.

Obviously, being left-wing I believe in a socialist utopia, but beyond that I believe it’s an urgent necessity. To clarify that, I should be more precise about what I mean by “believe”. I believe that utopia is desirable. That doesn’t mean I believe it’s realistic. That said, I should also explain what I mean by “realistic”. In fact, I might not even be talking about utopia, depending on how low the bar is set. I believe in a fundamental right to food, clothes and shelter. To me that’s basic good sense, following from the idea that there is a human right to life. If that isn’t self-evident to someone who isn’t psychopathic or sociopathic, I can only imagine that they’ve been conditioned in some way to believe something completely against good sense, and of course that happens a lot because there are such things as religious fundamentalism and believers in a flat Earth. However, that doesn’t mean it can actually happen given our current position.

If you confine your actions to achieving aims you feel completely confident can be reached, you’ll be confined to what the rich and powerful are willing to concede, which isn’t very much. One way to achieve a target is to aim beyond it. Hence utopianism has a role in that respect. However, this isn’t utopianism. It isn’t utopianism to expect people to be fed, clothed and housed in the world’s richest countries where most of the billionaires live. The question also arises of how those people have come to have so much money. If a worker deserves to be paid according to the usefulness of her work, there would appear to be a limit to how much someone can literally speaking earn, and the usefulness of the work done by the people concerned seems to be rather limited. For instance, Bill Gates is a billionaire but most of his software was bought from other people – he last wrote software in 1983. Moreover, there are free equivalents to all of the software I can think of that Microsoft sells. And yet, he is a billionaire. A philanthropist for sure, but this is not about the character of this particular billionaire. Moreover, we have the myth of the self-made “man”. In reality we all rely on each other for our existence and all ideas, including business ideas, are built on other people’s. Someone might have a good and fairly original idea, and it feels like they should get credit, perhaps financial, for that, but on the whole it isn’t the people who have the ideas who profit from them because they’re likely to be working somewhere their intellectual property is claimed by others, and those others may simply be those who inherited enough money to be more adventurous with their entrepreneurship.

Capitalism is basically cancer. When I was training to be a herbalist, I used the idea of capitalism as a mnemonic for the characteristics of tumours. Tumour growth is unregulated, purposeless and not related to the needs of the body. So is capitalism. I would like there to be some kind of mystical link between capitalism and cancer, but sometimes the link is all too real, for instance the exposure of factory workers to industrial chemicals or asbestos. But it hardly needs saying that capitalism has the same effect on the human race and the biosphere as cancer has on the body. It kills you. Capitalism literally kills people by starving them in the midst of plenty and freezing them to death while luxury properties lie empty and are even rendered inaccessible deliberately. It also kills people by poisoning them and so forth. And it’s poisoning the planet by its very nature. Well under 1% of ocean plastic pollution is from plastic straws. Most of it is from trawler nets, which are designed to kill sea life and will go on killing it even when they’re no longer used. Any difference consumers can make in terms of boycotting and trying to use sustainable products, while obligatory, is a drop in the ocean compared to what multinational corporations do. And it isn’t even their fault. They’re economically determined by the capitalist system to continue to function in that manner. They cannot help but be mass murderers and destructive to life as we know it on this planet.

Therefore it is an urgent necessity to overthrow capitalism if we’re to continue to exist. That is, unless those at the top do have a plan, and if they do it’s probably even more worrying as it’s likely to involve the death of billions more people and convincing the rest of us that it’s either a good idea or unavoidable. And maybe it is unavoidable. This is the problem.

I do indeed harp on about the necessity of achieving utopia, and let’s face it, it’s quite a limited utopia because it’s only about people having their basic needs satisfied universally and unconditionally, but there’s one point I can’t emphasise too strongly. The issue is not that I’m utopian but that if this isn’t done, we will all die, and it’s personal because that “we” includes our descendants. Family members. And maybe it is impossible, but if it is, we’re confronted with the certainty that we will all die horribly, or people we care about will. Some of us have already done so. The pandemic is caused by capitalism, and before you say China is a communist country, it has a stock market and millionaires, so it isn’t. It is literally impossible, by definition, for a capitalist society to have a stock market because that just is commodification. This could of course mean that communist societies degenerate into capitalist ones, but a common view is that both the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China evolved from primarily agrarian rather than industrial societies. In any case, global capitalism is responsible for the emergence of pandemics in the form of both Covid-19 and HIV, because deforestation and the consequent mixture of wildlife viral reservoirs leads to the evolution of new pathogens, and that takes place due to the various pressures placed on the environment such as the growth of cash crops and the rearing of cattle.

One of the notable things about the discussion of capitalism is that it’s often referred to as “late capitalism” nowadays, which seems to imply that it will be replaced by a different system. Whereas it doesn’t follow that this will happen, it’s true that it’s unsustainable. This will result in something like the extinction of humankind if it doesn’t end, but of course that extinction is practically the same as the end of capitalism. Once again I feel the need to remind you that the Doomsday Argument appears to show that the last human birth will occur early in the 22nd century CE, although the argument has its flaws and doesn’t predict what will cause this even if it’s valid. If it doesn’t happen, good, but if it does, capitalism failing to be replaced is a probable cause, and there is some evidence that this won’t happen, and therefore that this will be the cause of our extinction.

Hence it is indeed entirely feasible that even a limited utopia sufficient to preserve the continued existence of the human species is impossible to achieve from the current state of affairs, or perhaps it’s better to state that it cannot arise from it at any point because it may not be down to human agency. But let’s not shrink from what this means. It means that we’re about to become extinct. Nothing is being done to prevent this because the system is fundamentally incapable of doing so. It’s based, for example, on economic growth and the rapid replacement of products, the inefficient production of necessities and the manufacture of artificial scarcity. The world economy produces enough for everyone and yet people still starve and die in other ways of neglect of existing goods and services which are unavailable to them because of the way money is made to work under capitalism. Not that money necessarily works as a system anyway, but it existed before capitalism so it could possibly have been less dysfunctional in the past, for instance before usury.

One thing I’m not sure about is whether “they” have a plan. It’s undoubtedly inevitable that if capitalism continues it will murder most of the world’s human population as well as continuing the current mass extinction, but it isn’t clear if there are any ideas about how to save the elite. It may simply be that they believe their own propaganda and think there will be some kind of solution, or even that there is no problem. I find that plausible because of the extent of climate change denial that exists, which seems to be genuinely held to be so. There’s also the issue of the complexity of the problem. We’re not just talking about pandemics, but also climate change and its associated disasters and the number of products which rich people also encounter which are too dangerous to be fit for purpose. If you’re a rich CEO being driven down Wall Street and a vehicle’s brakes fail because of the manufacturer skimping on standards and it crashes into your limousine and kills you, you’ve become a victim of capitalism, just as you would if no antibiotics are available to treat a superbug you picked up because of the non-profitability of developing new antibiotics or using phage therapy. You’re still going to be dead either way, and the number of increasing threats is legion. But as I say, maybe they do have their own answer, but it won’t matter to 99% of the world’s population because we’re all still going to die because they’ve destroyed the environment for profit.

This, then, is what I’m trying to drive home. It is absolutely feasible that this limited “utopia” cannot be achieved, and I realise I’m repeating myself at this point but I can’t emphasise this strongly enough. If that is the case, we’re all going to suffer horribly and die, and not just abstract people out there living thousands of miles away but us, our friends, neighbours, relatives and the people we care about who are close to us. So you’d better make damn’ sure utopia is practical and do everything you can to achieve it because otherwise you can kiss goodbye to your great-grandchildren not suffering agonisingly tragic deaths, which could’ve been prevented. And I’m not even blaming you because it’s the system, not the people.

Sorry, this has been a bit of a rant. And yes, extinction may be the plan, but it’s more likely to be the expectation and it won’t be the rich who will die out, at least at first, but even they’re vulnerable.

Two Immortalities

Be careful what you wish for. Even if immortality involves living forever in a physically healthy body much as it would be in the prime of life, it would take a miracle to make it bearable in the long run. Boredom can constitute an extreme form of suffering extended over millennia, and this time it would never end. This, to me, has long been the problem with the idea of eternal life in the Christian sense. I chose to resolve this by thinking of the human mind as a closed system within which entropy tends towards a maximum, in this case a form of insanity perhaps, and the options are therefore eternity without God with one’s mind filling up with emotional purulence and stagnating, or eternity with God which links one to the infinite, and therefore an open system, which by some miracle makes it bearable. Just a thought experiment. Olaf Stapledon seemed to have something like this in mind in the “cult of evanescence” – the idea that there is beauty in mortality, though this was in beings with a life expectancy of fifty thousand years.

Even so, people do generally not want to die and when they do it’s often because they find their current life unbearable for all sorts of reasons. Consequently, as a species we like to pursue things which might extend our lives. And there are a few animals who are kind of immortal. There’s a species of starfish, if I remember correctly, who starts off as a swimming form containing a tiny body of the future adult, who is then deposited somewhere and the rest of the larva swims off and doesn’t die. I’m not sure how this works because it makes it sound like eventually all the biomasse of the planet would turn into starfish vehicles, but so I’m told. There’s also a jellyfish who responds to injury and disease by ageing backwards and then growing back towards adulthood, and planaria, flatworms I used to keep as pets along with leeches as a child, way before I went vegan of course, do the same kind of thing. They respond to starvation by shrinking from twenty millimetres long to about three, after which they’re rejuvenated, and since they often reproduce by pulling themselves in half, the planaria living today are in a sense the same individuals as their distant ancestors who knows how many thousands or millions of years ago. Finally, there’s a bird called Leach’s storm petrel who doesn’t age in the usual way for vertebrates. Chromosomes have long bits on their ends called telomeres which prevent fraying damaging actual genes. Every time cells undergo mitosis in a living animal’s body, these shorten slightly until this damage starts to occur. In Leach’s petrel, and probably other related birds, telomeres lengthen with age. Procellariformes, the order including storm petrels, tend to live surprisingly long for animals of their size. A starling has a life expectancy of fifteen years, and is about the same size as one of these birds, but a Leach’s storm petrel can live to about thirty, and is likely to die of a non-age related cause such as infection, accidental death or being eaten.

Ageing could be seen as amounting to accidents which befall the inside of the body, sometimes to do with outside factors. As such, it may not be entirely realistic to think of a human being as simply getting older, and circumstances where humans were impervious to such diseases as cancer, heart disease, infections and diabetes would not also be circumstances where we were immortal because we could step off the kerb and be knocked down by the proverbial ‘bus at any point. It isn’t even clear whether a real distinction can be made between stuff going on outside the body and stuff going on inside it, so a simplistic assessment of how frayed your chromosomes are may not be terribly informative. In fact chromosomes that don’t fray may be problematic, a point to which I shall return.

We are of course chordates. I keep saying this but haven’t explained what it means. In case you don’t know, a chordate is an animal who at some stage in her life cycle has gill clefts, a stiffening back rod and muscle blocks. They often have a post-anal tail, i.e. the end of the digestive system and the genitalia are not always the end of the body. Humans usually but not always lack external tails but of course we do have them and they’re not even vestigial, as anyone who has fractured or bruised theirs will testify – it makes it painful and difficult to do number twos, for instance. We also have gill clefts as embryos and in fact our ears and jaws have evolved from them. If our notochords don’t regress, which normally happens by the age of four, they can eventually cause problems rather like benign tumours although they are usually asymptomatic.

We have, as I mentioned yesterday, evolved from fish-like invertebrate chordates, but the story doesn’t begin there. Early chordates were like sea squirts, and this time I’ll seek out a picture of an individual sea squirt rather than the admittedly pretty Haeckel-stle illustration I used previously:

Komodo National Park sea squirt (Polycarpa aurata)
Date
10 October 2006
Source
Own work
Author
Nhobgood Nick Hobgood

Sea squirts are I think completely brainless filter feeders as adults. The two siphons whose openings you can see suck water in and blow it out, trapping plankton in a mucous “net” which is then eaten. They have hearts which pump their blood sporadically in either direction arbitrarily and swap over sporadically. Their blood is also unique for being high in vanadium, possibly to make them poisonous to potential predators. This is an adult sea squirt, who lives facing head down, attached to the sea bed. Sea squirts are probably the ancestors of all vertebrates, but looking at one like that, and there are considerably stranger ones out there, it might be hard to guess. That’s because it’s an adult.

Sea squirts start off as tadpoles. Here’s a comparison of an ascidian (as they’re known) and a frog tadpole side by side:

The resemblance is remarkable and is a clue to how fish, our ancestors, came to be: a process called neoteny, which occurs a lot in evolution. Neoteny is when the younger form of an organism becomes its life-long form. It happened in humans when we evolved from other apes – we are more like baby apes of other species than their adults. Sea squirts start their lives as tadpoles, with vision and brains guiding their activity, seek out a suitable site to attach to, then do so head down, lose their eyes and brains and develop into their adult stage. There’s another group of invertebrate chordates called the larvaceans, so called because they stay in their larval form but are otherwise like juvenile sea squirts. This is one called Oikopleura:

Photo of eYFP expressing Oikopleura dioica taken by Dr. Thomas Clarke.

It’s thought that fish evolved from these via lancelet-like forms, and therefore in a sense all vertebrates are larval. Now I don’t know if there is anything left of the genes or mechanisms which would allow a vertebrate to change from her larval to an adult form, but considering that humans spend all their lives, up to ten dozen years, in their larval form I sometimes wonder if we could do a little tweak and make ourselves metamorphose into our adult form as giant marine blind and brainless sea squirts. The adults live up to thirty years, and the tadpoles take only a day and a half to settle and start to change, so proportionately, assuming three score years and ten to be our life expectancy, we could live up to half a million years. But would it be worth it? Intuitively, a post-human sea squirt doesn’t seem to be much more than a sarcophagus or memorial, although knowing that the oceans are where all our family members end up living might change our attitudes towards their stewardship.

That scenario is of course quite fanciful and is almost certainly impossible, not to mention pointless, but it would effectively be immortality of a kind. There is another kind which is much more feasible and closer to home, which also involves the sea. I’ll start with dogs.

There is a tumour affecting dogs, wolves and coyotes referred to as Canine Transmissible Venereal Tumour. Thousands of years ago, a dog developed a tumour in his genitalia which could be passed on through coitus. That dog’s genome survived to some extent to the present day because he is now effectively that tumour. It contains his genome to some extent. It can also be passed on by other social contact such as licking and can also infect the nose. I found out recently that this tumour is one of the few survivors of the dogs who used to cohabit with Native Americans, incidentally. It can cause urinary obstruction and can recur after surgery. So there’s that.

Then there’s the famous Henrietta Lacks:

Please pay attention to this caption!
This is a photograph of Henrietta Lacks, legally speaking ALONE property of the University of Harvard, taken in the late 1940s. It will be removed solely on request of a member of her family or a legal representative of her family. It will absolutely not be removed on request of the University of Harvard.

I suppose it’s possible that you don’t know who Henrietta Lacks is. I’m not going over that again. Look her up if not.

Ms Lacks’s cervical cancer is good evidence that a transmissible tumour could occur in human bodies, even a transmissible venereal tumour. So far as anyone knows, it hasn’t happened yet. However, since the human population of this planet is increasing, the probability of the requisite mutations occurring is also increasing. This is how someone can, in a sense, achieve immortality.

HeLa cells are able to survive in vitro, which happens sometimes with certain cell lines but is fairly unusual. This is interesting because clearly lab conditions are very different from inside the body. It’s this ability to survive in a different environment which persuades some to regard them as a different species. The karyotype (chromosomal number) is also unique and not like that of most human somatic cells. HeLa cells are at least triploid for every chromosome if not more. Most animal cells are diploid, including a pair of each chromosome. HeLa have up to five copies of some, and there are also some mixed chromosomes and they can vary in chromosome number, which is not surprising since they’re cancer cells.

Cancer cells are in a sense a triumph of evolution. They mutate in order to avoid the “kill signal” sent to cells which have gone awry, they can survive while circulating in the blood out of contact with their usual environment and they are, ironically, much better at handling anærobic respiration. The reason this is ironic is that there’s a fake cancer treatment called lætrile which is based on the hypothesis that theyŕe worse at it, which as well as being dangerous even in a healthy person would quite possibly encourage the growth and spread of tumours. Cancer cells are also immortal, at least up until the point where they kill the host, and as CTVT, HeLa cells, a sarcoma found in hamsters and devil facial tumour which affects Tasmanian devils demonstrate, even beyond that point.

Trichoplax adherens. Eitel M, Osigus H-J, DeSalle R, Schierwater B (2013) Global Diversity of the Placozoa. PLoS ONE 8(4): e57131. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0057131
Author
Bernd Schierwater

Placozoa are a phylum of very simple multicellular animals consisting of a flat mat of cells which absorbs organic débris from the surface they’re living on and reproducing by shedding clumps of cells. They may also produce eggs. They are the simplest animals of all, and looked at another way they’re basically free-living tumours. HeLa cells can survive outside the body. I’ve also mentioned organoids before. These are the result of cells shed from the human digestive tract into sewers which multiply and form tiny organised bits of organs in sewage works. These too are human cells which can survive outside the body. They’re also nightmare fuel of course.

Putting all of those things together, a couple of possible scenarios arise. One is that there could be a human tumour transmissible through sexual contact, and it’s possible also that this could cause sterility. If that spread sufficiently and early enough in fertile life, it would probably reduce the population considerably and perhaps completely. That seems unlikely, however. I can easily see that there could be a tumour transmissible between humans in this way but it would eventually come to light, at least by the time it had reached parts of the planet which have medical facilities. However, the human species seems bent on its own destruction thanks to global capitalism. It’s hard to imagine what will happen once we’re gone, except that there may be a lot of nuclear power station meltdowns and poisoned areas around them, which however might stimulate evolution just as they did at Chernobyl with the mould which uses ionising radiation as a source of energy. I think it’s feasible, given the state of the planet right now, that it will bounce back after a period of chaos and instability. In order for that not to happen, it would mean that even microörganisms living in deep sea thermal vents would have to be wiped out. It could even be that evolution will be stimulated, as it often seems to be, by mass extinctions, and that there will be greater biodiversity in a few million years’ time than there was before the onset of the recent ice ages. Mammalian diversity, for example, has been in decline for millions of years even without the influence of human activity.

The Doomsday Argument, which I’ve mentioned from time to time in this blog, is a probability-based argument that the human species will soon become extinct. It emphatically does not depend on any specific apocalyptic process, which is important to note because it seems at first to suggest that our extinction will be caused by overpopulation. Rather, it works as follows, and I’m going to use out of date statistics and trends here to argue for it just to illustrate the principle. First of all, for the purposes of this argument to count as human it has to be possible that the individual concerned can have the thought that humans will cease to exist physically. It was estimated several decades ago, when the population was at around 4 000 million, that there had been 75 000 million humans from 200 000 years ago to the day the estimate was made, and at the time population doubled about every thirty years. The thought of human extinction has occurred in all sorts of situations throughout history, for instance in connection with Christian eschatology, and it’s easy to imagine a small tribe of people unaware of anyone else fearing for their survival back in Palaeolithic times. The probability that one is living at the end of human history increases as population increases, and given those figures, which are not now as accurate as they were because population growth is slowing, the final human birth is due to occur in about 2130 relative to my own birth in 1967. Of course this argument has many flaws. However, it requires human sentience.

Imagine this then. Humans as we know them die out. In the meantime, cell lines from a transmissible venereal tumour have come to thrive in sewage and nearby warm seas, perhaps parasitic on other animals. Humans will therefore survive and be immortal, just not in a state which can contemplate its own demise, but more like tumours living off other vertebrates living in the Caribbean or somewhere similar.

Immortality!