Five Ways the World Ends
Five Ways the World Ends, First Edition, By David Rollason
This book contains five stories, each exploring a different pathway through which human civilisation could come to an end. These stories are fictional, yet they are grounded in scientific understanding of how global systems operate. The aim is not to shock or alarm, but to examine how large-scale change can unfold gradually, through ordinary events and familiar decisions, until the systems that support life become unable to continue functioning.
The scenarios include climate collapse, meteor impact, supervolcano eruption, AI-driven optimisation, and ocean ecosystem failure. Each of these represents a known risk that scientists, policymakers, and researchers have studied for many years. None of them require speculation beyond what is already understood. The outcomes described here follow logically from the interaction of environmental, technological, and social systems. The stories show how decline rarely occurs through sudden catastrophe. More often, it develops slowly, through feedback loops, resource strain, and the accumulation of small shifts that, taken together, become irreversible.
The tone throughout the book is calm and clear. The writing focuses on cause and effect. There is no dramatic language or emphasis on emotional response. The goal is to present each scenario in a way that is easy to follow and grounded in observable processes. The events described are large in scale, but they are not exaggerated. They reflect what can happen when natural systems reach limits, when technology evolves beyond the assumptions that shaped it, or when small changes in the environment lead to large consequences over time.
These stories are not predictions. They are thought exercises based on plausible conditions. They do not assume that humanity will inevitably face any of these particular outcomes. Instead, they illustrate how vulnerable human systems can be when they rely on stability in complex environments. Civilisation is built on the assumption that the climate, oceans, atmosphere, and ecosystems remain within certain ranges. When those ranges shift, the systems built upon them must shift as well. Adaptation is possible, but adaptation requires awareness, planning, and time. In each story, the speed of change exceeds the capacity for adjustment.
There are no antagonists in these stories. The decline does not result from malicious intent, sudden collapse, or dramatic confrontation. It occurs because the systems that sustain life are interconnected, and stress in one part of the system influences all others. Climate change influences agriculture. Ocean warming influences plankton. Social coordination influences resource distribution. Technology influences decision-making. Each scenario shows how complexity can be both a strength and a vulnerability.
The characters in these stories are societies rather than individuals. The focus is on how communities respond, how institutions attempt to manage changing conditions, and how daily life adjusts when familiar patterns no longer hold. The stories show that people continue to work, plan, and adapt even as the world changes around them. There is no sudden loss of meaning or purpose. There is a gradual adjustment to new realities, until those realities become normal.
The purpose of this collection is not to offer solutions. It does not argue for specific policies. It does not propose technological fixes. Instead, it encourages reflection. The questions raised are simple and universal. What happens when the systems we rely on no longer behave in predictable ways. How do societies respond to slow-moving change. What does resilience look like in a world that becomes less stable and less abundant. How do people continue to live meaningful lives in the face of long-term transformation.
The stories are quiet. They are steady in pace. They reflect the way large changes actually unfold. Not through sudden drama, but through gradual shifts that accumulate across decades. Each story ends not with collapse in the traditional sense, but with a transition to a new state of the world. Life continues, but it continues differently.
This book invites the reader to understand that global systems are not fixed. They are dynamic. They respond to pressure, influence, and time. Humanity has shaped these systems. Humanity also depends on them. Awareness of this relationship is the first step in understanding both vulnerability and responsibility.