Yeah, I basically agree. But this takes us back to the discussion of *where* 
the memory/logic/data is stored. That painful-waste-of-my-time Weinstein 
podcast talked explicitly about how evolution might happen much faster than we 
think. And we know that cultural evolution (should use scare quotes, but meh) 
can happen even faster than biological evolution. 

I've argued emphatically (even if I don't quite believe it) that the human 
organism's repertoire is so plastic that it's impossible to characterize the 
long-term trends of socially emergent phenomena. There can be no master 
equation ... no coherent psychohistory 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychohistory_(fictional)>. 

Regardless, I'm in your camp. My meatspace friends even call me a misanthrope, 
which is not at all true ... but very truthy. I ran across this article the 
other day:

The power of crowds
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2020/jun/02/the-power-of-crowds

I honestly cannot relate to any of it. The feeling I get when "crushed" either 
just my ears in a huge chorus or crushed physically in, say, a sweaty dance 
club is the same. I get this anxious overwhelming feeling of dread. I used to 
be able to drink heavily to suppress it. But that's not a good solution.

On 6/3/20 11:44 AM, Gary Schiltz wrote:
> Does it make me a sociopath for me to hope big cities *do* collapse and 
> become a thing of the past? People who know me well understand when I say I 
> like persons, but not people, which is to say that while I treasure 
> individual friendships and relationships, I at best tolerate crowds. I think 
> we have not evolved the psychological mechanisms to live together in great 
> concentrations. Our advanced civilization is much too young to qualify as 
> having stood the test of time, a few measly tens of thousands of years is 
> such a small blip in time compared to the time life has existed on our 
> planet. I personally believe that the Earth would be much better off with 
> under a billion (highly educated) people, with AI and robotics providing for 
> the bulk of our material needs, and that is something we should as a species 
> strive for. But then, I could be absolutely, completely, wrong about all 
> this, and instead just be a sociopath. I hope not.

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

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