and the amount of electricity and water needed for AI
Along with everything else. An accelerated tipping point.
We had the Industrial Revolution, the population grew, and science was held to be the answer to everything. AI seems to be a further extension of the same track.
At root, we are biological. I don't see that it's possible for us to escape that, nor would I personally want to. Given the evidence that I can see, it seems that the future of humanity is dystopian. Which is a kind of tragedy, but something to accept.
Colonies on Mars, & humanity decamping wholesale to other galaxies? A fantasy. Hawking, for all his genius - no. Musk, for his gifted ambition - no.
We have this Earth. We're on it. It's our home.
Each of us is mortal. The Earth is in itself mortal along with all that lives upon it. My feeling is that it's time for us to clue into that and forget the urge towards fantasies that are essentially self-seeking, if not escapist.
And yes, surrender is tough to take.
I read an odd novel, written by a Canadian in the last century (I think) - Riddley Walker. An awkward read, but in retrospect, it rang true. And I think that's where we're headed. Space travel & AI being uncomfortable disruptions, but in the long run just flashes in the pan.
Society ascends, and then declines.
Makes you wonder why we piddle about with photography?
Of course I can't claim to be right. It's just a feeling ...
But mortality and acceptance are perhaps terms to embrace wholeheartedly. It's not meant to be easy, that's for sure.