Can modern man see their own demise coming? One would think that would not be a problem
but other great civilizations did not anticipate the end. Actually, too much inequality and too few natural
resources could leave the West vulnerable to a Roman Empire-style fall.
If we're to avoid their fate, we'll need policies to
reduce economic inequality and preserve natural resources, according to a
NASA-funded study that looked at the collapses of previous societies.
"Two important features seem to appear across
societies that have collapsed," reads the study. "The stretching of
resources due to the strain placed on the ecological carrying capacity and the
economic stratification of society into Elites and Masses."
In unequal societies, researchers said,
"collapse is difficult to avoid.... Elites grow and consume too much,
resulting in a famine among Commoners that eventually causes the collapse of
society."
As limited resources plague the working class, the
wealthy, insulated from the problem, "continue consuming unequally"
and exacerbate the issue, the study said.
Meanwhile, resources continue to be used up, even by
the technologies designed to preserve them. For instance, "an increase in
vehicle fuel efficiency technology tends to enable increased per capita vehicle
miles driven, heavier cars, and higher average speeds, which then negate the
gains from the increased fuel-efficiency," the study said.
The researchers used what they termed a Human And
Nature DYnamical (HANDY) formula to reach their conclusions. The formula uses
factors such as birth rates, resources, and income classes to create a
mathematical equation to project outcomes.
The study was sponsored by NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center and headed by the National Science Foundation's Safa Motesharrei.
For those who think modern society is immune from
the problems that brought down ancient civilizations, a "brief overview of
collapses demonstrates not only the ubiquity of the phenomenon, but also the
extent to which advanced, complex and powerful societies are susceptible to
collapse," the study said.
So how do we save ourselves? "Collapse can be
avoided, and population can reach a steady state at the maximum carrying
capacity, if the rate of depletion of nature is reduced to a sustainable level,
and if resources are distributed equitably," reads the report.

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