Unstoppable change, stasis, and climatism (Charles Battig) USofA

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Unstoppable Change, Stasis, and Climatism Charles Battig April 24, 2018

“Thousands of years of climate adaptation by untold numbers of biological species is now viewed by climate alarmists as an obsolete process, as they assume that the global climate environment has reached its ultimate optimum state of ‘now’.” The most recent rebuttal by Rob Bradley to a “Climate Alarmist at R Street” included reference to “change” as a primal fear among the environmental alarmists. Stasis, indeed, is a defining characteristic of the Malthusian, deep ecology worldview held by many natural scientists working in academia. Inherent in our earthly existence is change. Change characterizes all physical entities on some time scale. Order succumbs to disorder, unless work is expended to mitigate it, at least according to the law of entropy. Yet climate is held to a pseudo-spiritual standard of enduring timelessness and unchanging behavior. Change, indeed, is also central to business and economic concepts. The second most famous term in economics (after the “invisible hand”) is creative destruction, where the better replaces the good because of shifting consumer demand and wholly new entrepreneurial offerings. Business is about shifting on a dime as profit/loss signals dictate–or be left behind. Eco-Stasism A present Panglossian perfection is assumed by the eco-radicals to exist for the climate. Human life spans are a short blip on the geological time line, and so the current Gaia worshipers have been spared the hardships of their ancestors when they had to deal with the realities of the last Ice-Age. One wishes that human flourishing in the Age of Fossil Fuels was their standard instead. The following essay of mine, “The Only Thing We Have To Fear Is Change Itself,” was published in 2014 (with a few changes here). It explores this theme, and attempts to relate this change angst to current social mores. 1


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