This is a disingenuous framing. Ice ages are part of a geologic-timescale cycle; there have been four significant glacial periods over the last half a million years.
Even during an ice age lasting about 100k years you had interglacial periods on a shorter time scale where the ice shields retreated significantly.
The point is we‘re talking about immense natural geological climate changes happening on the order of 1000 years within the life time of all human kind.
It’s disingenuous framing to imply mankind to go extinct because of the current temperature trends.
Again, this doesn’t mean we should just watch and go on burning coal. But it’s a bit ridiculous seeing intelligent people on HN to get carried away by scaremongering.
It will probably not go extinct, no. But these changes might not be compatible with the kind of advanced civilization we’re all used to and that supports a population of billions. I, for one, am not ready to go back to whatever living standards they had in 1000 AD.
Wrong. The last ice age only ended about 11000 years ago -- our ancestors lived in a world where most of the British isle was covered by ice.
> The current sharp increase in a span of a century is completely unprecedented.
This might still be true, however. Mankind should do something about its carbon emissions. But please stop all this doom saying, please.