Rapid de industrialization followed by the internet and social media almost broke our society.
Also, I don’t think people necessarily realize how close we were to the cliff in 2007.
I think another transformation now would rip society apart rather than take us to the great beyond.
Whenever i use search terms to ask a specific question these days theres usually a page of slop dedicated to the answer which appears top for relevancy.
Once i realize it is slop i realize the relevant information could be hallicinated so i cant trust it.
At the same time im seeing a huge upswing in probable human created content being accused of being slop.
We're seeing a tragedy of the information commons play out on an enormous scale at hyperspeed.
Most of all, AI will exacerbate the lack of trust in people and institutions that was kicked into high gear by the internet. It will be easy and cheap to convince large numbers of people about almost anything.
The GFC was a big recession, but I never thought society was near collapse.
The internet made it so that you can share and access information in a few minute if not seconds.
Smart phones build on the internet by making this sharing and access of information could done from anywhere and by anyone.
AI seems occupies the same space as google in the broader internet ecosystem.I dont know what AI provides me that a few hours of Google searches. It makes information retrieval faster, but that was the never the hard part. The hard part was understanding the information, so that you're able to apply it to your particalar situation.
Being able to write to-do apps X1000 faster is not innovation!
The rest of the world has mostly been experiencing industrialisation, and was only indirectly affected by the great crash.
If there is a transformation in the rest of the world the west cannot escape it.
A lot of people in the west seem to have their heads in the sand, very much like when Japan and China tried to ignore the west.
China is the world's second biggest economy by nominal GDP, India the fourth. We have a globalised economy where everything is interlinked.
In that sense Western countries have proven that they are intellectualy very nimble.
Even if you accept the idea that gay sex is a sin, the entire basis of Christianity is that we are all sinners. Possessing wealth is a failure to follow Jesus's commands for instance. You should be complaining a lot more if the prime minister is rich. Adultery is clearly a more serious sin than having the wrong sort of sex, and I bet your country has had adulterous prime ministers (the UK certainly has had many!).
I think Christians who are obsessed with homosexuality as somehow making people worse than the rest of us, are both failing to understand Christ's message, and saying more about themselves than gays.
If you look at when sodomy laws were abolished, countries with a Christian heritage lead this. There are reasons in the Christian ethos if choice and redemption for this.
Why would that be a contradiction? Gay people can't be Christian?