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Lumifer comments on Wikipedia articles from the future - Less Wrong Discussion

19 Post author: snarles 29 October 2014 12:49PM

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Comment author: Lumifer 30 October 2014 03:48:31PM 1 point [-]

What's a "catastrophe" in this context and which model predicts it?

Comment author: CronoDAS 01 November 2014 02:10:13AM *  1 point [-]

Droughts, famines, flooding, etc.

I seriously expect 4 degrees Celsius warming by 2200, if not 2100.

Comment author: Lumifer 01 November 2014 07:38:29PM 2 points [-]

Do you believe that by 2200 the level of human technology will be inadequate to deal with the droughts and flooding?

Comment author: CellBioGuy 02 November 2014 06:02:52PM 0 points [-]

What would 'adequate' technology to 'deal with' those look like?

Comment author: Lumifer 02 November 2014 07:54:23PM 2 points [-]

Droughts are pretty easy, you can do it right now if you stop trying to maximize evaporation and start doing something reasonable like drip irrigation.

Flooding is a bit different in that I assume we're speaking about the Greenland glaciers and some of Antractica melting. You can either prevent them from melting or just build high walls around particularly valuable pieces of real estate. Shorelines are never stable, anyway -- continental plates rise and sink, estuaries silt up, hurricanes rearrange barrier islands, etc.

Comment author: ChristianKl 01 November 2014 07:48:15PM -2 points [-]

The problem with flooding is not the average year. It's the year where you get a tornado that you haven't accurately predicted beforehand and that wrecks your defenses. Your dams break and then you lose a lot.