I might need a better title (It has now been updated), but here goes, anyway:
I've been considering this for a while now. Suppose we reach a point where we can live for centuries, maybe even millenia, then how do we balance? Even assuming we're as efficient as possible, there's a limit for how much resources we can have, meaning an artificial limit at the amount of people that could exist at any given moment even if we explore what we can of the galaxy and use any avaliable resource. There would have to be roughly the same rate of births and deaths in a stable population.
How would this be achieved? Somehow limiting lifespan, or children, assuming it's available to a majority? Or would this lead to a genespliced, technologically augmented and essentially immortal elite that the poor, unaugmented ones would have no chance of measuring up to? I'm sorry if this has already been considered, I'm very uneducated on the topic. If it has, could someone maybe link an analysis of the topic of lifespans and the like?
Are you also considering the unforeseen unintended consequences of not pushing the button and concluding that they are preferable? (If so, can you clarify on what basis?)
Without that, it seems to me that uncertainty about the future is just as much a reason to push as to not-push, and therefore neither decision can be justified based on such uncertainty.
Yes. It's not that the world-as-is is a paradise and we shouldn't do anything to change it, but pushing the button seems like it would rock the boat far more than not pushing it. Where by "rock the boat" I mean "significantly increase the risk of toppling the civilization (and possibly the species, and possibly the planet) in exchange for the short-term warm fuzzies of having fewer people die in the first few years following our decision."
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