Early in the twenty-first century...
...it happened.
It was a holocaust beyond the collective memory and consciousness of the
human species. There was little warning
of the impending disaster. It came
suddenly. It was devastating. The only
good news was that it happened in early winter.
If it had been spring, the chances of mankind’s survival would have been
much slimmer. There was of course no way
of knowing whether humanity would ever regain the heights, or slowly wither on
the cold slopes of a hostile world.
Prior to the disaster they stood precariously on the peaks, giddy with
enterprise, drunken with the desire to consume the visible universe in their
gradual metamorphosis into the gods they historically worshipped. In the mid-twentieth century they went to the
moon. They landed machines on Mars. In another hundred years or so technology may
have even allowed them to visit a solar system of a nearby star, at least via
robot. Who knows? In a thousand years they could have edged
very close to the core secrets of the universe and existence itself. After all, at the beginning of the twentieth
century powered flight was impossible.
By the end space travel within the solar system was realised. One hundred years. Less than an instant in
geological time. Little more than an extended lifetime of one human being who could
easily have witnessed the Wright Brothers’ success at Kitty Hawk as a small child
and lived to see men on the moon. It was capitalism which initially released all
this potential power within the human species.
Capitalism was a method of creatively inventing wealth in such a way
that it could be accumulated and stored.
Like an enormous battery. When it
was released it gave birth to the Industrial Revolution and the Age of Technology
which followed it. Much has been said of
capitalism since its conception. It has
been called an economic system, but that belies its power. The real beauty of capitalism is that it is
an idea. Nothing more. That is, it was a unique combination of reason-directed
emotion, crafted over a relatively short time to become the most powerful
economic engine the world has ever known.
And, like the combustion engines it spawned later, its exhaust gases
proved to be noxious. But many forget
that without capitalism, humans would not have flown or reached for the
stars. Arguably, there would have been
no Mozart or Darwin, either - or Marx.
There would perhaps have been other artists and scientists and thinkers
more thinly spread, but capitalism also gave people more leisure to
invent. Wealth spread from the very,
very few in the Middle Ages to a whole class of people
instead of being held in a scattering of hereditary hands. It was a way of widening the gene pool of
those with the time for ingenuity, along with the wealth to explore and
experiment. Sharing of information
around the world increased the pool to a lake.
Technology foreshortened everything. After the seventeenth century, inventions
came thick and fast. With increasing
technology, they came faster still. In
the end it almost took the breath away. The eruption of Vesuvius early in the
twenty-first century was not quite the end, but it was far worse than the one
in the year AD 79 when the cities of Herculaneum, Pompeii and Stabiae
were overwhelmed by a rain of ashes and mud.
In that eruption over two thousand people died. In 1631 five towns were destroyed in an
explosion which killed three thousand.
There was another big one in 1906 with another big loss of life. Since that time smaller eruptions have
happened in 1913, 1926, 1929 and 1944. This eruption, though, blew a huge hole
in the lower leg of Italy.
Generally, the longer a volcano is dormant, the bigger the bang - such
as the explosion of Pinatubo in the Philippines in 1991 or Mount St Helens in
1980. Vesuvius was never expected to be
the first volcanic eruption in over seventy-three thousand years to be
classified as a VEI 8 event. It dwarfed
the 1815 eruption of Tambora, Indonesia, itself ten times more violent than
Pinatubo and a hundred times more powerful than Mount St Helens. In this one the indescribable forces
underneath Vesuvius blew into the atmosphere more than 1,750 cubic miles of ash
and sulphur aerosols, excav