A new study by a director of one of the world's largest accounting firms, KPMG, reveals that a 1972 model by MIT researchers predicting the collapse of society in the 21st century looks to be worryingly on track, a report by Vice explains.

The 1972 model, called World3, was created in the '70s using empirical data, and it was published in a book called 'Limits to Growth'.

Essentially, the model aimed to answer the question of what would happen if humanity keeps pursuing economic growth, no matter the societal and environmental cost? It concluded that, without drastic change, industrial society was headed for collapse.

    • invalidusernamelol [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Present conditions are significantly more impactful on decision making than future conditions. Even when those future conditions are pretty clear.

      E.g. every day millions of people get in cars even though they know that it will lead to thousand of them dying.

    • s0ykaf [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      our ancestors bred for farm hands, we are breeding for post-apocalyptic communist super soldiers responsible for creating a new mankind from the ashes of the old