‘The odds are not in our favour’: who sets the Doomsday Clock – and what can they tell us about the future of humanity (www.theguardian.com)
from girlfreddy@lemmy.ca to world@lemmy.world on 09 May 07:39
https://lemmy.ca/post/64587929

The Earth is getting hotter. Conflicts are raging, in the Middle East and Ukraine, each increasing the chance of nuclear war. AI is infiltrating almost every aspect of our lives, despite its unpredictability and tendency to hallucinate. Scientists, tinkering in labs, risk introducing new, deadly pathogens, more destructive than Covid. Our pandemic response preparedness has weakened. The Doomsday Clock – a large, quarter clock with no numbers, keeps ticking, counting down the seconds until the apocalypse. Tick. Tick. Tick. In January, we reached 85 seconds to midnight. Experts believe humanity has never stood so close to the brink.

“What we have seen is a slow almost sleepwalk into increasing dangers over the last decade. And we see these problems growing. We see science advancing at a rate that defies our ability to understand it, much less control it,” says Alexandra Bell, CEO of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the organisation that sets the Doomsday Clock. She speaks of the “complete failure in leadership” in the US and other countries, which are doing little to address global, catastrophic threats, even as they feed into one another. Climate change increases global conflict, for instance, and the incorporation of AI into nuclear decision-making is, frankly, terrifying.

#world

threaded - newest

HeroicBillyBishop@lemmy.ca on 09 May 08:09 collapse

calm down fercrissakes, these guys have been proclaiming the end of the world my entire life

“one more second!” like wtf, go for a walk outside and get some fresh air

IcePee@lemmy.beru.co on 09 May 09:30 collapse

Not so, if you look at their website, you’ll see at numerous time through the decades they actually decreased the risk of Armageddon. I fear your sentiment of complacency is precisely the danger they’re warning of. To pull a quote:

In an urban society, everything connects. Each person's needs are fed by the skills of many others. Our lives are woven together in a fabric. But the connections that make society strong also make it vulnerable.

Threads

It just takes one thread, whether it be food, water, environment, radiological or biological to snap, and down goes civilisation. As civilization becomes more complex, the threat surface also become exponentially larger.

HeroicBillyBishop@lemmy.ca on 09 May 10:29 collapse

dude, calm down

Can you imagine what these guys would’ve set this thing to during the black plague?

we will be fine, go get some fresh air and talk to real people