Elon Musk published a few hours this tweet:
"Population collapse due to low birth rates is a much bigger risk to civilization than global warming"
Robin Hanson, who is something for whom I feel a lot of intellectual respect, liked the tweet.
In my model of the world works, overpopulation is in fact a big problem. In general, the more people you have, the less resources you have to share among those people. A decreasing population would be in fact good news, although maybe not in the short term.
Can you help me understand what are Elon/Robin seeing that I am not?
A couple of extra points for the sake of clarity:
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I do understand that, in the current system, having an aging population is a problem because many resources go toward people that reach an old age
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AI might or might not end the world. Let's assume in this scenario that it does not and we have many more decades ahead
The only hard limit on our resources that we currently know of are the energy output of our sun in the short term and the energy output of reachable stars in the long. We are not constrained on food, space, energy, etc on earth in the short term. We have only artificial political constraints where the stationary bandits ruling the various geopolitical units have subsidized the creation of narratives justifying your constraint. Humans do not consume wealth, they create it.
My argument is not about the object-level, it's just an explanation of why I think it's not worth continuing the discussion. I feel I should provide some explanation of why I want to cut the discussion off here, and for me what matters is whether we're making claims that in principle could be falsified or not, and whether those claims actually relate to the question asked in the post.
For instance, when I give power cuts in the... (read more)