Hence why a likely reason that the galaxy isn't filled with spacefaring
sapients is because they destroy themselves before they can develop the
proper technology to travel through space. We seem to be headed that
direction ourselves. Humanity won't necessarily become extinct per se,
only civilization will, with humanity undergoing a severe population
collapse with the few surviving remnants of humanity isolated from each
other, thus undergoing their own separate evolutionary paths.
I presume this is the case for many potential civilizations, in order
for a species to develop a civilization in the first place they need to
be adaptable, able to adapt to almost any kind of scenario using only
their wits, it was how humans were able to colonize Eurasia during the
Ice Age. I doubt that even a nuclear apocalypse will fully wipe out an
intelligent, adaptable species such as ourselves, but will inflict
severe *and* permanent damage from which we may never recover,
especially in a globalized, post-industrial world such as ours. Previous
cases of societal collapse were regional at best, since even with highly
advanced pre-modern civilizations they weren't truly global, even Rome,
whose tentacles seemed to reach every corner of the known world, as far
south as the Congo and as far east as China, was really limited to the
Mediterranean and surrounding regions, which is why the Fall of the
Western Roman Empire, while tragic and severe, only affected Western
Europe and North Africa rather than the entirety of the known world.
In today's society, however, we are so inter-connected that a
catastrophe in one place will ultimately affect all places. One can see
this with the wave of refugees fleeing Syria and destabilizing the
regions they flee to, such as Europe, which is just one of many signs
that the end of our civilization is near. Trump and Daesh (the Arabic
name for ISIS), while severe, are ultimately the symptoms rather than
the cause, they are just proof that we signed our death warrant long ago
with the start of the Industrial Revolution. Similar events happen when
a society is on the road to collapse, Ancient Rome underwent similar
patterns, such as increasing wealth inequality, the fleeing of people to
relatively more stable regions, back then it was the so-called
barbarians fleeing the Huns, today it is Syrian refugees fleeing the
modern equivalent to the Huns, ISIS, ancient Rome also underwent
increased xenophobia in response to these migrants, as we are currently
undergoing, and this allowed demagogues to come into power, such as the
idiots responsible for the execution of the Roman general, and who was
possibly Rome's last hope, Valens.
However, while back then it took centuries for a civilization to fall,
nowadays, due to globalization, it only takes a few decades at minimum,
and a century at most. The latter part of the current century will be
very chaotic, and I fear by the end of this century the nukes will have
already flown, and another century from then the world will be very
different, the future will not be as we imagine it today, it will be
similar, at least at first, to the *Mad Max* franchise or the *Fallout*
series of video games, but as time goes on and the remaining resources
used up, we won't have bands of raiders but tribes, we won't have gangs
on motorcycles because the motorcycles will have long since ceased
working, but instead people on foot, we will lose writing since there
won't be any need for writing.
Let me paint a picture of the far future using analogues from a period
in ancient history I find the most fitting to what we are currently
experiencing and what will ultimately happen. The periods of history I
am mentioning are the Late Bronze Age Collapse and the following Greek
Dark Ages. The Late Bronze Age collapsed happened for a variety of
reasons, all intertwined, but most of them can be traced back to the
eruption of a volcano on Crete during the 1300s BCE, this caused a
period of regional cooling in the Eastern Mediterranean that led to
famine in the area, which also led to refugees fleeing the regions
impacted by the regions and destabilizing the regions they fled to
(seeing a pattern?). These people are now known as the "Sea Peoples",
based off of inscriptions from the Ancient Egyptian cities of Karnak and
Luxor describing a confederation of people arriving from the sea and
proceeding to lay waste to Egypt. Among them were the ancestors of the
Philistines as well as surviving Minoans, who were *from Crete*.
They didn't just target Egypt, other regions were targeted too. There is
a wide swath of destruction across the Near East during this time as
cities from Troy to Gaza were put to the torch and then abandoned.
Civilization continued in some areas, but everybody experienced some
sort of societal disruption. The Assyrian civilization survived, but by
the end of the Late Bronze Age Collapse they only retained control of
Assyria itself, most of Anatolia was a scorching wasteland, the Hitties
and Hurrians were no more, and the people that replaced them were
Semitic and Indo-European (the Hittites were also Indo-European, but the
Indo-European invaders weren't the Indo-Europeans who had settled
Anatolia in the first place) nomads who saw the chaos and decided that
there was some prime real estate they could claim as their own.
Greece on the other hand was totally destroyed. For a period of 50 years
Mycenaean Greece was put to the torch by either invading Dorians (a
group of Greeks who weren't Mycenaean) or the Sea Peoples, and their
government collapsed as a result. Fast forward a few decades, and all
that was left was either smoldering ruins or a severely reduced
population that reverted back to tribalism, even writing was abandoned
since there was no need to keep records anymore since their wasn't a
complex state to maintain and keep records of.
Writing wouldn't be introduced to Greece for another four centuries, and
where once there were kings there were tribal chieftains, where once
there were cities there were small hamlets. Where once there were
nations there were now clans. I think this is what will ultimately
happen to our civilization, there will be a period of disruption, but
once the flames peter out there won't be an America anymore, there won't
be a civilization anymore, there will only be the clan.
And it will be global in scope, and we may never recover from it due to
the state of our society. It is paradoxical that we have come so far,
yet once we lose it we may never recover it because in order to do so
requires infrastructure as well as a fucking population. You may know
how to build a generator to keep electricity, but you need fucking
resources to build that generator in the first place, and we won't have
the infrastructure capable of getting those resources, either that or
the resources will be long gone.