I clarify:
Let’s say scientists can’t come up with solutions to global problems, AI gets out of control and turns almost everyone into paperclips during wars, and in the 2040s or 2050s, the surviving people (about a few tens of millions around the world or even less) gradually return to the level of intelligence of their distant ancestors?
I can cook over a wood fire and teach others the same. I can do carpentry with un-powered hand tools to an acceptable level. I am a pretty decent archer. Hopefully I could find a group of survivors who valued those skills over my delicious flesh.
I wish you good luck!
So many depressed people on Lemmy, everyone just going with dying huh?
I mean I am excited to finally flex my creativity, see if there is anything I can figure out how to do with all our crap and the new world. Maybe some kind of silly The Grinch level home full of housing code violations and crazy contraptions made of garbage while I cross breed pea/beans.
It would be cool if when I die people thought of me as some weird hermit alchemist and as they wander through my house finding tools of the old world uncover a lost truth and then some YA type shit happens as a result.
Dying is easy, we all do it eventually, the question is, if you do anything before you get to the same finish line.
I don’t see us regressing before 1820. Will just be back to your horses, carriages, and living off the land.
That still requires metal and there’s no surface deposits to support it
Damn, you expressed my words for me.
There’s plenty in landfills to be “mined”
Afaik that can only be recycled with pretty energy intensive arc furnaces or regular fossil fuel combustion. No accessible fossil fuel limits you to fallout style scrap-tech, which is probably not sustainable for a long term 17-18th century civilization.
I take unbridge with the line
Level of intelligence of their distant ancestors
All evidence so far points to humans being at the same intelligence levels as they are now since basically when we first became Anatomically Modern Humans.
We were not less intelligent, we just had less information and less data.
You can be a Supergenius the likes of which only seen in comic books, but if you don’t have the right data and information, you’re no different to anyone else.
As you have well noticed, I did not take into account that human evolution did not advance much intellectually and computationally, it was rather a matter of the variety of information that sharpened the human mind, to put it simply. Unfortunately, it is difficult to take all this into account.
Probably live in a forest
Not a bad idea, but it will be better in mountainous areas, it is safer there, since predators will not climb there, because there is no food for them there.
Let’s say scientists can’t come up with solutions to global problems
We already have the solution, the French made it in the 1800. We just lack the will to use them again.
In the 18th century, so the 1700s.
Which one?
No I assume they mean the problem of people being stupid assholes.
I mean…the short is answer is “die” almost certainly from unclean water, for at least 60% of the general western population.
I would be in the roughly 8 billion dead for sure.
die
All the people saying, “I’d just die,” remember that neolithic peoples (hell, all people up to the present day) rely on social bonds. You don’t have to possess every survival skill, just enough skills to be an asset to a community of mutual-support.
I already educate children, and regardless of society’s form I’d probably continue to do so because it’s vitally important. Also as someone well-practiced in a variety of handicrafts, I suspect I’d find my niche quite comfortably. Making useful things from limited resources, teaching others how to make such things, and teaching children the knowledge I’ve accumulated throughout my life, I think there’s bound to be a place in a stone age community for someone like me.
work with others every day
Is dying still an option?
Well given the extinction of more than a half million essential crop species and the previously universal knowledge of farming that occurred in the last century. Expect to die alongside billions of others.
Our distant ancestors had just as much capacity for learning as we do, they just used it in different ways because that was what the nature of their daily lives demanded. Where we can recognize dozens of brands by their logo alone, they recognized plants by their leaves, useful stones, and scat. Our accumulated knowledge we pass on doesn’t make any one of us any “smarter”. Some of us alive today are not rocket scientists but have the capacity to be, just as there were people thousands of years ago that had that capacity but not the thousands of years of science and engineering that was needed to build on to take that last step and achieve it.
Solitary living is a luxury made easier by the abundance of technology we have, going it alone in a Stone Age state would be very, very difficult, then and now. Folks who understand things like tool making, agriculture, medicinal plant identification, bushcraft, animal husbandry, hunting/fishing/trap making, and clothing making would have a leg up. Those who have all that and the ability to form small cooperative groups would stand an even greater chance of success. I’d also throw out that despite the rise of digital storage, we have a lot, a lot of printed material in the world. Even if we forget how to read, there’s pictures and illustrations. Kids aren’t raised in isolation, knowledge (even diluted knowledge) gets passed on, and we wouldn’t forget where we once were, and the ruins of civilization would be all around. You’d almost need some sort of sci-fi level disease to wipe all of our minds to get us back to true Stone Age levels of living and prevent us from understanding how scavenged tools could be used. We might forget how to forge steel but we’d keep scavenging it for blades rather than revert to stone.
For all y’all on here saying you have no survival skills: computers and electronics aren’t going to just go away, and the fact that you’re having this conversation on a federated internet forum means you know at least a little bit more about computers than your average bear. For any scenario where extinction is a possibility, being able to operate a computer and use it to communicate with other humans would be a huge asset, and the more of those people we have around the easier it’ll be to keep it going when things go to hell. Don’t sell yourself short.
Well, yes, there are actually still places with metals, those that are not yet known (which have not moved into AI and data centers), so computers can be revived over time, but only if there are unknown mines left in your country or region.
I’d become a craftsperson that’s for sure, whatever I end up doing will probably be creative manual labor of some kind - pottery for example, but not limited to. It depends on the situation wherever I’m at in the hypothetical moment.
Also, as a side hustle I’d be running something like a DnD table. I’d be on a personal quest to reconstruct the rules, I’ll be pretty much asking everyone I meet if they played, what they remember and if they’d be interested in joining my group. I believe with no Internet, tv, or radio, ttrpg would become extremely popular.
The only possible answer is that I would eek out an existence foraging for twigs and berries as a neolithic hunter gatherer. However, in my case I would only do that for several months before I died from a chronic health condition I manage with medication, so there’s that.
I don’t know if it’s really possible for us to go back to the stone age. There’s so much steel and iron lying around. I don’t really know much about metallurgy but I’m pretty sure I could figure out how to flatten some rebar into a blade if it was all I had to do all day.
We also have domesticated breeds of livestock and know how to raise crops.
So, at worst it would be some kind of modern iron age, neolithic isn’t really possible.
It depends on the region and country, but yes, matalurgy can be resumed over time and quickly in 5-20 years, again depending on the country and region.
In the novel Star’s Reach, in a post-collapse society, one of the main characters is a ‘miner.’ Their mining guild basically tears apart old concrete buildings, by hand, with sledge hammers to extract the old rebar from them.







