Sophistication is a negative unless it actually adds more capability. We've used combustion engines for a long time, but that doesn't make them primitive. Modern internal combustion engines are marvels of technology and efficiency.
It is most probable that such solutions have already been developed but supressed to support the continuing oil-based world economy. There is usually a dip when a new technology begins to become viable, establised ones have had longer refinement.
Respectfully I think you are confusing superficial refinement and fundamental crudeness. Let's look at your BMW for instance. To support that combustive energy it needs a complex, heavy and large engine with three carefully separated chambers, a coolant system with a pump, a cooled lubrication system with a pump, an exhaust system with a catalizer, an induction system, an ignition system, a complex transmission and so on. It even uses a completely separate system to retard the speed which completely wastes the kinetic energy as heat. Even then it is still harmful to the environment, has a short lifespan and cost considerable energy to manufacture.
Stated this way, pretty primitive I would say. Having to add those layers of complexity is a bad sign, if we are discussing sophistication / primitiveness. Basically it's a hundred year old solution which has only altered in refinement, greater tolerances, electronics, testing and knowledge and refinement etcetera. Your BMW even shares the format of the Model T Ford infact.
Liking / loving and having passion for it is another thing entirely (which I'm sure you do).
Wealth is not "created from nothing". If you believe that then you have watched too many Zeitgeist videos.
The FIAT system is detached from any finite resource and hence limitlesly expandable. The Federal Reserve does not issue large amounts of money periodically then? On what is that money / wealth based? Don't such organisations have to produce additional money to accomodate an expanding global population?
I'm guessing you meant the Venus Project for which Jacques Fresco is known. It strikes me an nothing more than another collectivist utopia. And like all other collectivist utopias it requires changing human nature itself through social engineering, and that will always fail. Though usually not before murdering a few million people.
Yes that's the one. Too many projects I get them mixed up. I think you need to go a bit deeper into the concept you're doing it an injustice to look for reasons to immediately dismiss it. It is rather more the absence of social engineering I should say, trying to create a society closer to the neutral human state.
Regarding social engineering, the present day is more a product of this than anything else and has a casualty rate you mention already. Wouldn't you agree it takes considerable social engineering to encourage a large percentage of the population to work full time in jobs they don't really enjoy or like? Look at commerce and the cultivation of consumerism over the last 100 years. For sure an associated period of progress but arguably as much negative consequence.
Unless all people become one huge monoculture borders will always exist. Humanity will never become a monoculture. Perhaps there will be no national borders sometime in the far future, but there will be state/regional/municipality etc. borders. Just look at your own country with all its different cultures... How long has the UK existed as a unified country? How many partially self-ruling governmental sub-entities exist in the UK? Ask a Cornish person if he/she identifies as Cornish or British first. Scotland is about to secede... After how many hundreds of years as one nation? Humanity is becoming culturally and politically more fractured, not more unified.
I don't see anything wrong with cultural borders. Actually they are more like a steady changes of colour than border lines. I more find the concept of confining / excluding people objectionable. Scotland is no different from many places in the world in that it was forced to be part of a larger union against its will and not strictly self-governing.
Also for the record I no longer live in Britain, not that it really matters.
The third world hasn't been exploited by the west since the time of European colonialism, and the debate is still ongoing whether colonialism had a net positive effect (though nothing would make it right). You're expressing what is commonly known as guilt mongering or "white guilt". Your AK-47 argument is nonsensical; you can't sell irrigation systems and schoolbooks if the buyer only wants AKs. How many schools do we have to build on our own dime only to have them burned down by the next tribal feud or would-be dictator? Africa is the richest continent on Earth in natural resources; Africa is the most fertile continent on Earth for agriculture. That people are poor and hungry in Africa is not the fault of the western world.
Well that would be all well and good if it wasn't in the interests of the Western world to keep it underdeveloped. Of course people will want to buy Ak-47s if they are allowed to / encouraged to fight and they are cheap and in ready supply. Especially with the backdrop of the developed West and its commercial imperative. Many nations give aid while at the same time forcing unethical trade agreements in exchange.
Which is the more intelligent long-term solution? To let them 'work it out for themselves' and just contain them or help them become more productive and 'civilized' (for want of a better word)?
Dreaming is good, as long as it doesn't blind you from reality, from what's practical and achievable.
Here you are way out of your province and firmly in my world. 'Dreaming' is precisely the art of creative thinking concerning what is not yet practical and achievable. This is kryptonite for this creative process. Many of the projects I am involved with / surrounded with are well in advance of present technology. For this the connection to anticipating and driving technology is very fuzzy and reflexive. I am not totally blind to present realities, but we are largely discussing future possibilities.
What a wall of text our discussion has become. I have enjoyed some of our conversations and have learned things from you. I may have to stop now. I am rather busy with deadlines this month.