Will People Change vs. Can People Change?

by James Wallace Harris, 2/28/24

I just finished listening to The Deluge by Stephen Markley, a book that speculates on what the next sixteen years could be like. The book is almost nine hundred pages in print, and over forty hours on audio. Reading this book feels like it’s compressed the last twenty years of polarized political conflict into a forty-hour long disaster film. It’s intense.

Markley uses a large cast of characters to dramatize how people on the left and right will battle for control over the next five U.S. presidential election cycles. Most of the story involves two groups of characters, those working within the political system, and those who decidedly don’t. Markley portrays an ultrasecret ecoterrorist group that works to force change by violent acts versus a dedicated group of political wonks that labor in Washington to influence both parties. Dynamic women characters lead both groups. (By the way, I disliked both women. The only character I cared about was a drug addict in Ohio, who Markley uses as a kind of everyman.)

To further spice up the story, Markley explores the growing power of computer surveillance, artificial intelligence, privacy, and how everyone can be tracked.

I’m not going to review the details of The Deluge because I want to use my reading experience to talk about a specific response to reading the book. I’ll link major book reviews at the end in case you’re considering reading the book. I can say liberals will be terrified by the conservatives in this story, and conservatives will by horrified by these fictional liberals.

The Deluge is about climate change. We could have solved that problem by now if we had acted promptly twenty years ago. The government could have added a tax on all fossil fuels and then raised it slowly month by month. For example, by adding ten cents to the federal tax on gasoline each month. If we had started this in the year 2000, gasoline would be approaching $30 a gallon today. That would have forced people and corporations to make the changes needed.

That tax revenue could have been used to overhaul the power grid and for developing renewable energy technologies. If we had taxed carbon properly, we wouldn’t be fighting over climate change today. That didn’t happen. It didn’t happen because the people who owned trillions of dollars in fossil fuel reserves made sure it didn’t happen. They built a political and religious coalition to fight with them to protect that wealth.

All that’s beside the point now. What Markley envisions is the breakdown of the United States over the next sixteen years so it’s obvious to all we need to do something. The Deluge includes dramatic scenes of a massive fire that destroys Los Angeles, a massive flood that overwhelms the Midwest, and a massive hurricane that devastates east coast states. These events caused the insurance industry to collapse, leading to economic chaos. Markley doesn’t overplay all this. His fictional disasters are realistic, only somewhat larger than what we’ve already experienced, killing just hundreds or a few thousand people in each event, but having an enormous impact on politics and the economy.

Reading The Deluge makes readers ask themselves: Will American change soon? But I ask: Can people change at all?

Before reading this novel, I had seen two insightful videos about climate change that ask the same questions. The first video makes a careful case saying people don’t change and if there is a solution for avoiding climate change it must work with the psychology of how people act. The second video summarizes the first video with impressive summations of it and this tweet. (I wish I could summarize what I watch and read this well.)

Over the two hundred thousand years that our species have existed on this planet, we haven’t changed. Our societies and technologies change, but not us. Over those two hundred thousand years we have developed four major cognitive tools to understand reality: religion, philosophy, mathematics, and science. Only science using mathematics has consistently proven it can consistently describe reality. If you don’t believe that I wouldn’t fly in an airplane.

Science is not black and white. It’s statistical and hard to understand. But science has overwhelmingly shown that adding more CO2 to the atmosphere is turning up the temperature. The parts per million of CO2 in the air acts like a thermostat. Add more CO2 turns up the temperature. The only way to return to the weather we liked in the past is to return to the CO2 levels of the 1960s, but we keep adding more. The only way to stop adding CO2 is to completely stop using fossil fuels. And if we want to turn down the thermostat, we need to remove CO2, which isn’t easy. That’s why taxing carbon is the only way to force us to change, but we won’t do that, because it’s not in our psychology.

However, The Deluge suggests when things get bad enough, we’ll change. It ends hopefully. People even have hope for their children and grandchildren.

Personally, I don’t think we will change. If you want to know what the next sixteen years could be like, read The Deluge. If you believe people can change, and we’ll do the right thing eventually, read The Deluge. If you don’t believe we’ll change, I wouldn’t bother with the book unless you like looking at train wrecks. And if you suffer from depression, I suggest avoiding reading this novel at all costs. I seldom get even the slightest depressed, but this book bummed me out.

Reviews:

JWH

8 thoughts on “Will People Change vs. Can People Change?”

      1. Hi Jim:

        I don’t know what “human nature” is. If we substituted “mind” for human nature and asked “Does the mind of human beings change?” The answer, according to the developmental psychologists is “yes it does’ and it has changed dramatically over the last millennia. The stages of human development have gone from egocentric, to ethnocentric, to world centric, to rational, to post rational, and we’re on to integral.

        A good example is the acceptance and practice of slavery which was prevalent in all societies up until about 200 years ago and homo sapiens has evolved beyond the acceptability of enslaving other human beings. There are many other examples of evolutionary development to new levels of consciousness which occur on two levels, the individual and the social.

        David Markham

    1. David, society changes constantly. Humans make changes to the world around them all the time. The trouble is, we don’t seem to ever change our basic human nature.

      1. Hi Jim:

        Homo sapiens both individually and collectively go through stages of development. A 2 year old behaves and functions differently from a 20 year old and a 70 year old. At these different stages of development they all can be described has manifesting “human nature” at different stages of development. A fully developed Oak tree looks nothing like an acorn but both possess “oak nature.”

        Remember the old saying the “ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny” meaning that individual development recapitulates the typical development of its species. Species continue to evolve or go extinct and so their “nature” is continually changing to adapt to external demands and pressures.

        The statement that human nature doesn’t change seems pessimistic and based on a sense of futility and fatalistic destruction. I believe the opposite is true: that human nature is very flexible and adaptable and that as a species homo sapiens will survive in some fashion.

        David Markham

  1. I don’t think people will change. Sabine Hossenfelder’s tweet sums it up beautifully.

    It’s like we’re watching a movie where some ignorant people put everyone else in danger without realizing it and you’re yelling at the tv: “OMG! Stop!” but of course they can’t hear you. And to think as a kid I really thought humans would become more advanced beings, like in Star Trek.

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