Save the humans!
- none of the above because until forced to do so things never change.
We had cellular technology for at least a couple decades before cell phones became ubiquitous. But, in a sense, people were moving towards the iPhone for 30 years. It started with the Motorola pager, and Palm Pilots. I got a pager when my wife was pregnant. I'd get a text and get all excited, but then see that she just wanted me to pick up some eggs or something frivolous. Nokia phones became very popular for texting in Europe, but most Americans just had them for emergencies. Serious techies had Blackberries. Eventually we got to the point where Apple made the iPhone ultra-trendy with people lining up around the block to get one.
The smart phone has become the Swiss Army knife of modern life. It has a ways to go before it becomes obsolete. But, the integrated bio-chip will replace the smart phone in the not too distant future. Then, people will be connected like the Borg. It's likely that if I have grandchildren, their genes will either be selected or manipulated. They may grow up to experience life mostly thru the future internalized version of the Oculus virtual reality device.
It's noteworthy that the Pope's 'global warming' encyclical only mentioned warming and climate change 9 and 12 times respectively (out of 40,000+ total words). Most of the teaching was about spiritual, economic and technological sociological issues. "Life gradually becomes a surrender to situations conditioned by technology", he said. "It has become countercultural", Francis continued, "to choose a lifestyle whose goals are even partly independent of technology." The encyclical often reads like a sad swan song of the human species, and in that sense it resonates with me.