Sunday, April 12, 2026

When the Last Drop Runs Dry: A Quiet Reflection on a World Beyond Fossil Fuels

 

When the Last Drop Runs Dry:

A World Living on Borrowed Time - 

My Quiet Reflection on a World Beyond Fossil Fuels

I wrote an article about on April 1, 2026 how demanding and destructive humans are in this link

https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/2026/04/from-fire-to-fallout-ascent-burden-and.html

Today,  I shall  follow up my thoughts  with an example on the global  oil and gas prices going up  partly due to closure of the Hormuz Straits from oil producing countries in the Middle East.

Modern civilization, for all its brilliance, rests upon a hidden foundation—one that is ancient, finite, and quietly diminishing. The fuels that power our industries, move our vehicles, and sustain global trade were not created in our time. They are the compressed remains of life that existed hundreds of millions of years ago, sunlight captured by prehistoric plants and stored beneath the Earth in the form of oil, gas, and coal.

For more than a century, humanity has lived extravagantly on this inheritance. It has allowed us to build vast cities, connect continents, and manufacture materials that previous generations could scarcely imagine. Yet, beneath this progress lies a simple and inescapable truth: fossil fuels are non-renewable. What we consume today cannot be replenished within any meaningful human timescale.

Even now, the fragility of this dependence reveals itself. When tensions arise in oil-producing regions, particularly in the Middle East, the effects are felt almost instantly across the globe. The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow maritime passage through which a significant fraction of the world’s oil supply flows, stands as a critical artery of the global economy. Any disruption, even the threat of closure, sends shockwaves through markets, raising prices and unsettling nations. These events serve as a reminder that our energy security rests not only on geology, but also on geopolitics.

Yet even in the absence of conflict, depletion remains inevitable.

 

The Mathematics of Growth and Decline

Estimates suggest that known reserves of oil may last for several more decades, while natural gas may extend somewhat further, and coal perhaps longer still. However, such estimates often assume a static rate of consumption, an assumption that does not reflect reality.

However, human population has grown from approximately one billion in the early nineteenth century to over eight billion today, and it continues to rise. With each additional billion comes increased demand for energy, food, transportation, and manufactured goods. This growth follows not a simple linear path, but an exponential one, where consumption accelerates over time. As a result, the effective lifespan of fossil fuel reserves is likely shorter than static calculations suggest.

Before the physical exhaustion of these resources, another threshold is reached—the point at which extraction becomes economically or energetically unviable. This is often referred to as “peak oil.” Beyond this point, production declines not because oil has disappeared, but because it has become too costly to obtain. The consequences are far-reaching: rising prices, economic instability, and intensified competition among nations.

 

A Gradual Unraveling

The depletion of fossil fuels will not occur as a sudden collapse, but rather as a slow and uneven decline. Yet its effects may be profound. Modern economies are deeply intertwined with cheap and abundant energy. As costs rise, industries falter, transportation becomes constrained, and the price of essential goods, particularly food begins to climb.

Global supply chains, which depend on the seamless movement of goods across continents, may begin to fragment. Diesel-powered trucks, jet aircraft, and cargo ships form the backbone of modern logistics. Without them, or with their operation severely restricted by cost, the global distribution of food and materials becomes increasingly difficult. Regions that rely heavily on imports may face shortages, while local production regains importance.

At the same time, electrical grids, especially those already under strain may experience instability. Rolling blackouts or reduced capacity could become more common, affecting both industry and daily life. In such a world, living standards may decline, at least initially, and societies may be compelled to adopt more localized and less energy-intensive ways of living.

 

Beyond Energy: The Hidden Dependence

Energy, however, is only part of the story. Fossil fuels are not merely burned; they are transformed into an astonishing array of materials that define modern life. Plastics, synthetic fibers, pharmaceuticals, detergents, cosmetics, and countless industrial chemicals are derived from petrochemical feedstocks such as naphtha, ethane, and propane.

This creates a deeper challenge. Even if humanity successfully transitions to alternative energy sources such as solar, wind, hydroelectric, or nuclear, the question of materials remains. How do we produce the substances that underpin modern medicine, infrastructure, and daily convenience without relying on fossil carbon?

Paths Toward a Post-Fossil World

In response to this challenge, several pathways are being explored. One approach involves turning to bio-based feedstocks using contemporary plant matter as a source of carbon rather than ancient fossil deposits. Crops such as corn and sugarcane can be converted into bio-ethanol, which in turn can serve as a building block for plastics and other chemicals. Plant-derived oils can replace petroleum-based inputs in certain applications.

Another promising direction is carbon capture and utilization. In this approach, carbon dioxide, often regarded as a waste product, is captured from the atmosphere or industrial emissions and transformed into useful chemicals. When combined with hydrogen produced using renewable electricity, it becomes possible to synthesize fuels and materials, effectively recycling carbon in a closed loop.

Advanced recycling technologies offer yet another avenue. Instead of allowing plastics to degrade into waste, they can be broken down into their original molecular components and reassembled into new materials, preserving both value and resources.

Finally, the electrification of industrial processes seeks to replace fossil fuel combustion with renewable electricity, enabling high-temperature chemical reactions without direct carbon emissions.

 

A Deeper Paradox

And yet, as I  observed to the best of my scientific understanding, a deeper paradox remains. The shift toward bio-based materials depends on land, water, and plant life, resources that are themselves under pressure from population growth and urban expansion. Forests are cleared for agriculture, and agricultural land is consumed by cities. The very systems we look to as replacements may be constrained by the same forces that drove fossil fuel consumption.

Thus, the challenge is not merely technical. It is systemic.

 

My Moment of Spiritual Reflection As Well: 

The eventual decline of fossil fuels may not simply mark the end of an energy era, but the end of a particular worldview—one that assumes endless growth on a finite planet. It may compel humanity to reconsider its relationship with nature, to move from extraction toward stewardship, and from excess toward balance. 

In this sense, the depletion of fossil fuels may carry within it not only the seeds of crisis, but also the possibility of renewal.

For in losing the ancient sunlight stored beneath the Earth, we may finally learn to live within the gentle, continuous gift of the sunlight that falls upon us each day. If we fail to understand, unable or unwilling to change our demands and extravagance, we are destined towards our own extinction to allow other simpler and meeker life forms to regain and inherit this earth once again.  

 


References for Further Reading:


1.  BP Statistical Review of World Energy (latest editions)

2.  International Energy Agency (IEA) – World Energy Outlook 

3. U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) – Global reserves and consumption data

4. Vaclav Smil – Energy and Civilization: A History 

5.  Hubbert, M. King (1956) – Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels (original Peak Oil theory)

6.  IPCC Reports – Climate and energy transition pathways

7. Ellen MacArthur Foundation – Circular economy and plastics reports

Monday, April 6, 2026

The Bicycle is The Greatest Invention Ever Invented

 

The Greatest Invention Ever Invented: Why the Humble Bicycle May Surpass Them All.

 When I was  in Cambridge I found a very high proportion of both the general population and students  ride bicycles. Cambridge is widely considered the cycling capital of the UK, with cycling rates in the city center often reaching 20–30%, comparable to cities in the Netherlands. 

 While not strictly mandatory, a bicycle is considered one of the most convenient ways for students to move between colleges, departments, and the city center.Students are generally not allowed to bring cars into the city during term time, making cycling, walking, or taking the bus the primary transport options. It is estimated that over 50% of students in Cambridge use bicycles. Students who bring bicycles to Cambridge are required to register them with the university. 

 Surveys indicate that more than 50% of residents in Cambridge use a bike at least once a week, and 58% at least once a month.

Riding on a bicycle is a social culture at Cambridge. Due to the flat terrain, compact city center, and high traffic, cycling is often the fastest way to travel.

The city has implemented "filtered permeability," closing off many residential streets to cars, which creates a safer and faster network for cyclists and pedestrians. 

 The city is built on low-lying land, making it ideal for pedaling. Parking in the center is limited and expensive, and the city has specific traffic schemes that limit vehicles in the center while allowing bikes.  Because so many people cycle, the high volume of cyclists creates a self-perpetuating, safer environment. 

While some students prefer to walk or use buses, bicycles are ubiquitous and a defining feature of daily life in Cambridge.

Ever since I was about 12 years old till today, among my greatest hobby and pleasure is to ride on a bicycle, and I do this even long after my retirement from medical research in 1994.  I would rather prefer to use a bicycle to ride up to 15 km than driving a car to wherever I want to go. This has been my social culture and lifelong love about riding a bicycle instead of driving, and I am not  ashamed about this unlike others who believes driving a car is meant for those with high class educational status and high social standing, while riding a bicycle is meant for low class and uneducated people. Take note carefully, even a person like Albert Einstein rode on a bicycle wherever possible, and he enjoyed doing so and it was during when he rode on a bicycle that he came out with his Theory of Relativity. Albert Einstein often used bicycle riding as a form of "mental cycling" to break through complex physics problems, stating, "I thought of it while riding my bicycle" regarding his theory of relativity. He utilized the relaxed state to imagine chasing light beams, visualizing how the speed of light would appear relative to his motion, which underpinned the theory of special relativity.

To those who thinks high and mighty about themselves take note also, it was not just Einstein who rode a bicycle but  I remember in the 1980's till I retired from medical research there was a World Health Organization Consultant from Sweden  to Malaysia who rode a bicycle everyday to work from his house to the Institute for Medical Research (IMR) where he was attached, and often to the Ministry of Health (MOH) for meetings. He would do this everyday.  His room at IMR was just diagonally across my room. But he was a Consultant from WHO to the government. Was he low class or uneducated riding a bicycle to and fro to work  everyday though an official car was provided for him ? Think again?   

Let me elaborate with other history.  

Throughout human history, a handful of inventions stand like towering summits above the rest, each reshaping civilization, redirecting destiny, and redefining what it means to be human. Yet when we ask what the single greatest invention might be, the answer depends entirely on our criteria: survival, knowledge, health, power, or perhaps elegance and efficiency.

The control of fire, though technically discovered rather than invented, was humanity’s earliest transformative breakthrough. Early humans learned not merely to observe fire but to command it; cooking made nutrients more digestible and likely contributed to brain development, warmth allowed migration into colder climates, protection reduced predation, and later the smelting of metals launched metallurgy and tool-making.

The wheel, emerging around 3500 BC, became foundational to mechanical civilisation.

From ancient chariots to modern turbines, from pottery wheels to jet engines, its rotating principle underlies much of engineering and industry.

Writing, developing in Mesopotamia and Egypt, marked the transition from prehistory to history. It allowed knowledge to outlive the human lifespan; laws, science, literature, and faith traditions could accumulate, be corrected, refined, and transmitted across generations.

The printing press, perfected around 1440 by Johannes Gutenberg, mechanised the spread of knowledge and catalysed the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the Scientific Revolution. Ideas could now travel faster than armies, and literacy expanded beyond elites.

Vaccines, antibiotics, and sanitation transformed medicine, saving hundreds of millions of lives and dramatically extending life expectancy. Electricity, together with the transistor, powers the modern world, forming the foundation of the digital age and enabling nearly every technological system upon which we depend.

Each of these inventions transformed humanity on a grand scale—intellectually, biologically, socially, and technologically. Yet if we refine our criteria to include elegance, mechanical efficiency, affordability, sustainability, health benefits, and harmony with nature, a quieter contender rises into view: the bicycle.

The modern “safety bicycle,” developed in the late nineteenth century, may be one of the most mechanically efficient transport machines ever created. A human riding a bicycle is more energy-efficient per unit distance than a person walking or running, and in many comparisons even more efficient than most animals. It has been estimated that if powered by gasoline, a bicycle would achieve the equivalent of roughly 3,000 miles per gallon. Even more impressively, approximately 95 to 99 percent of the energy applied to the pedals is transmitted directly to the wheels through the chain drive, an extraordinary level of efficiency rarely matched by larger machines.

Yet beyond energy efficiency, the bicycle reveals its brilliance even more clearly when we consider speed relative to human capability.

Humans naturally walk at about five kilometres per hour, a pace optimised for endurance rather than speed. Running increases this to roughly eight to fifteen kilometres per hour for most individuals, while elite athletes such as Usain Bolt have demonstrated momentary peak speeds approaching forty-five kilometres per hour—though only for a few fleeting seconds.

By contrast, a bicycle allows an ordinary individual to travel comfortably at fifteen to twenty-five kilometres per hour, already several times faster than walking and often faster than sustained running. A trained cyclist may maintain speeds close to thirty kilometres per hour over long distances, while professional riders can exceed sixty kilometres per hour in sprint conditions. Under specialised aerodynamic conditions, speeds have even surpassed one hundred kilometres per hour. My usual bicycle speed even at my age is between 15 - 20 kph - and this is far faster than I can walk. 

What is remarkable is that this dramatic increase in speed does not require a proportional increase in human effort. Through the simple yet ingenious combination of wheels, gears, and efficient power transmission, the bicycle amplifies human capability, transforming modest muscular input into sustained, rapid motion.

Thus, without altering biology, the bicycle allows the human being to transcend one of its fundamental physical limitations. It becomes not merely a machine, but an extension of the body, a multiplier of speed, efficiency, and range.

In comparison, while horses are powerful, they require feeding, stabling, and care. Camels are well adapted for harsh environments but are not mechanically efficient per unit distance. Birds achieve extraordinary flight efficiency but at high metabolic cost. The bicycle stands uniquely as a system that harmonises human energy with mechanical design to produce near-optimal terrestrial transport.

Beyond physics, the bicycle has shaped society in profound ways. In the late nineteenth century, it became a symbol of personal freedom, particularly for women. The American suffragist Susan B. Anthony observed that the bicycle had done more to emancipate women than almost anything else, as it granted independent mobility and encouraged changes in restrictive clothing. Mobility, in this sense, became synonymous with freedom.

Technologically, the bicycle also served as a laboratory for modern innovation. Pneumatic tyres, ball bearings, chain drives, and lightweight steel construction were refined in bicycle manufacture before being adopted by automobiles. The pioneers of powered flight, the Wright brothers, were themselves bicycle mechanics, and their understanding of balance and control played a crucial role in the development of the aeroplane. Even the demand for smoother roads was first championed by cyclists.

Economically and medically, the bicycle offers measurable benefits. In many parts of the world, access to a bicycle significantly improves earning capacity by expanding access to employment, education, and healthcare. At the same time, regular cycling enhances cardiovascular health, reduces the risk of chronic disease, and is associated with increased longevity. Unlike automobiles, which demand fuel, infrastructure, and maintenance, the bicycle requires minimal resources while actively improving the health of its user.

Philosophically, the bicycle possesses a quiet and enduring elegance. It requires forward motion to maintain balance, a simple mechanical truth that harmonise deeply as a metaphor for life itself. This is what I personally believe as a lifelong cyclist . The physicist Albert Einstein is often quoted as saying that life is like riding a bicycle: to keep one’s balance, one must keep moving. Whether or not he conceived his theories while cycling, the image remains both simple and profound.

If survival is the criterion, fire may stand supreme. If knowledge preservation, writing; if dissemination, the printing press; if life-saving power, vaccines and antibiotics; if technological dominance, electricity and the transistor. Yet if we measure greatness by elegance, efficiency, sustainability, affordability, health, social empowerment, and harmony with nature, the bicycle emerges as perhaps the most beautifully perfected machine humanity has ever produced.

It is simple yet profound, inexpensive yet trans-formative, mechanical yet deeply organic. In an age increasingly defined by complexity and energy consumption, the bicycle reminds us that true greatness need not be loud, massive, or fuel-hungry. Sometimes, the greatest invention is the one that moves silently, powered only by the quiet rhythm of the human heart.

 

Suggested References

Foundational Human Inventions

Guns, Germs, and Steel – Jared Diamond
(Broad historical perspective on transformative human developments) 

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind – Yuval Noah Harari
(Contextual discussion of fire, culture, and early human evolution) 

Wheel, Writing, and Printing

The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood – James Gleick
(History of writing, information, and communication) 

The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe – Elizabeth L. Eisenstein
(Definitive work on the impact of the printing press) 

 Medicine and Public Health

World Health Organization (WHO)
(Data on vaccines, antibiotics, and life expectancy) 

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
(Historical impact of sanitation and infectious disease control) 

Electricity and the Transistor

The Innovators – Walter Isaacson
(History of the digital revolution and the transistor) 

IEEE
(Technical background on electronics and engineering advances) 

 Bicycle Efficiency and Physics

Bicycling Science – David Gordon Wilson
(Classic and authoritative text on bicycle mechanics and efficiency) 

The Bicycle Wheel – Jobst Brandt
(Engineering insights into bicycle design) 

Wilson, D.G. (1973, updated editions)
“The efficiency of cycling vs walking and running”
(Often cited for energy efficiency comparisons and mpg equivalent) 

 

Human Speed and Physiology

American College of Sports Medicine
(Guidelines on walking and running speeds) 

International Association of Athletics Federations
(Sprint performance data, including records by Usain Bolt) 

Social and Historical Impact of the Bicycle

Two Wheels Good – Jody Rosen
(Cultural and global history of the bicycle) 

Susan B. Anthony (quoted in: various historical archives)
(On the bicycle and women’s emancipation) 

Bicycle and Technological Development

Smithsonian Institution
(Historical material on the Wright brothers and their bicycle background) 

 

Philosophical Reflection

Albert Einstein
(Widely cited quotation: “Life is like riding a bicycle…”)

(Note: Often quoted; exact original source is debated, but widely accepted in secondary literature.)

Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Speaking Serpent in The Garden - A Reflection on Knowledge, Wisdom, and the Craft of Confusion”

 

When the Serpent Speaks Again:

 

By lim ju boo (lin ru wu (林 如 武)

 

A Reflection on Knowledge, Wisdom, and the Craft of Confusion

 

It was after writing my earlier article, “From Fire to Fallout: The Ascent, Burden and Fall of Homo sapiens,” here, 

 

https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/2026/04/from-fire-to-fallout-ascent-burden-and.html

 

that an interesting response arrived—one that was, at once, simple, sincere, and strangely revealing.

That response came from reader who is a highly qualified and learned senior  engineer,  having reached the closing portion of my above article where the ancient account of the serpent in the Garden of Eden was mentioned, paused not at its meaning, but at its mechanics. He wrote to me asking, with genuine curiosity, how a serpent he understood plainly as a snake could possibly talk to Eve to deceive her in the Garden of Eden? He remarked, it was the first time he ever heard that a snake, and the only one that could talk? 

I must confess, I sat quietly for a moment not in confusion, but with a gentle smile of amusement. For in that single question lies a much larger story, not about serpents, but about the human mind itself. That question itself, the learned reader asked, triggers my mind to write this response.  

It is a peculiar feature of modern thinking that we have become extraordinarily skilled at analysing the surface of things, while sometimes overlooking their depth. We have learned to dissect, to measure, to verify. We ask whether something is biologically possible, mechanically plausible, scientifically defensible. And these are, without question, important inquiries.

Yet there are moments when such precision, admirable as it is, becomes misplaced—not because it is wrong, but because it is incomplete.

To read the account of the serpent and ask how a serpent or a snake can talk is, perhaps,  to approach a painting with a microscope. One may observe the texture of the paint, the arrangement of the pigments, even the chemical composition of the canvas—but miss entirely the image being conveyed.

For the “serpent” in that ancient narrative is not presented as a zoological specimen to be classified, but as a figure of remarkable subtlety—described not by its species, but by its character: crafty.

And what does this craftiness consist of?

Not in force, not in spectacle, but in suggestion.

“Did God really say…or did the serpent say?”

There is no command here, no overt deception, no dramatic display. There is only a question—carefully phrased, gently introduced, and profoundly effective. It does not impose; it invites. It does not declare; it insinuates.

And herein lies the deeper insight.

If one understands the serpent merely as a talking animal, one is left with a biological puzzle. But if one recognizes it as a representation of something far more intimate, the entire passage takes on a different dimension.

For the serpent, in this sense, may be understood not as an external creature that crawls and coils,  but as an internal voice—the subtle movement within the human mind that introduces doubt where there was once clarity. Eve was doubtful when God told her not to eat or touch that fruit. Instead, she changed her mind.  

From a spiritual perspective, this harmonizes with the understanding of Satan as a being not confined to physical form such as appearing as a serpent or a snake, but capable of influencing the mind, appearing not necessarily as something seen, but as something called thought - an evil, deceiving and doubtful thought I should say.  If such a presence exists beyond the limitations of the material world, then it need not speak through vocal cords. It may instead “speak” through ideas, through suggestions, through the quiet and persuasive language of inner dialogue.

To ask how  a snake or a serpent can speak or talk is not much different from Nicodemus who asked Jesus how can a man be born again back into his mother’s womb? Nicodemus was the Chief of the Pharisee.  He was a great scholar with great knowledge considered a top-tier scholar and teacher of his day. Jesus refers him as the teacher of Israel in John 3:10. He was acknowledged as a prominent educator in Jewish Law and scripture. He was a Pharisee and Jewish ruler who quietly went to see Jesus at night to privately inquire about his teachings and miraculous signs.

 Because of his status and knowledge, he secretly went to Jesus at night,  out of caution to avoid the scrutiny of his peers to learn from Jesus or to have an uninterrupted, private conversation when  Jesus told him unless he is born again he cannot enter heaven. Nicodemus interpreted this literally asking Jesus how can a person enter back into his mother’s womb to be born again, to which Jesus answered of a spiritual rebirth, not a physical one. This is the same as asking how a snake or a serpent can speak and talk. It was not the snake or the serpent that spoke, it was the spiritual mind that speaks    

This is how confusion begins—not through ignorance, but through misdirected reasoning.

It is perhaps here that the distinction between knowledge and wisdom becomes most evident.

We live in an age where knowledge is abundant, structured, and readily accessible. Even without information accessible to us through books, research papers and periodicals, we may already acquired them through our previous education. One may spend years in universities to acquire them, accumulate strings of degrees behind our names, master disciplines, and even have a PhD with an impressive command of knowledge, scientific facts, and theories, give ourselves academic and professional titles, and yet we lack wisdom when we interpret spiritual verses physically and literally such as how a serpent or a snake could talk?  A person may have a very  high IQ, vast knowledge, highly intelligent, but this is not the same as having wisdom - if he has one?  Yet, as experience so often reminds us, knowledge alone does not guarantee clarity of judgment.

As Albert Einstein once observed, “Imagination is more important than knowledge.” It is a statement frequently quoted, though perhaps not always fully appreciated and able to be understood  by most people - now that I have explained its meaning.  

For imagination, like knowledge, is a tool, powerful, expansive, and creative. But without guidance, it may just as easily construct illusions as it does insights.

This is where wisdom enters, quietly but decisively.

Knowledge accumulates; wisdom discerns.

Knowledge informs; wisdom interprets.

Knowledge answers; wisdom questions.


A knowledgeable person may understand how something works, yet fail to grasp why it matters, or whether it should be trusted at all.

Thus, one may possess the knowledge to question whether a snake can speak, yet lack the wisdom to ask what the “speech” represents.

And this, perhaps, is the more subtle challenge of our time.

For the “serpent” has not disappeared with the passing of ancient texts. It has merely adapted. It no longer needs to appear in symbolic form; it operates comfortably within the very faculties we prize most—reason, imagination, and intellectual inquiry and could easily deceive the human mind through religions, rituals, belief systems and even through scientific logic and reasoning 

It speaks in half-questions, in re framed meanings, in gentle doubts that appear harmless, even sophisticated.

It asks again, in countless variations:

“Did God really say, did the serpent really speak…?”

And we, equipped with vast knowledge but sometimes lacking wisdom, find ourselves engaging the question—analyzing it, refining it, even defending it—without always recognizing its origin or its intent.

So the issue is no longer whether a serpent once spoke in a distant garden.

The more pressing question is whether we can recognize the voice when it speaks within us  - and that's the serpent in us. 

For in the end, the greatest deception is not the obvious falsehood, but the subtle distortion—the thought that feels like our own, yet leads us quietly away from clarity.

And perhaps that is why the ancient description remains so fitting, even today:

The serpent was not powerful.
It was not overwhelming.

It was simply…crafty.

And, that is the same serpent that shall destroy us and all humanity. 

And that was also why I have written earlier - “From Fire to Fallout: The Ascent, Burden and Fall of Homo sapiens,” .

 

When the Last Drop Runs Dry: A Quiet Reflection on a World Beyond Fossil Fuels

  When the Last Drop Runs Dry: A World Living on Borrowed Time -  My Quiet Reflection on a World Beyond Fossil Fuels I wrote an article abou...