The games quite clear that removing all known problems from a society in turn creates new ones. Its not trying to have it both ways.
To quote Meteion, who brings up some pretty prescient examples
Meteion: One race had concluded that finite time was the root of all woes. Aspiring to shatter its shackles, they went in search of infinity. They discovered nothing is infinite, and that neither time or death can be cheated. Disillusioned, they gave up on the future-and themselvesThe point I think, is to demonstrate that despite their supposed "perfection," each and every one became a Dead End. The story isn't trying to both say these societies are perfect and they failed, but that no society is perfect and they, believing it possible to achieve perfection fell apart when faced with that reality. That to me is logically consistent.Meteion: One race had discarded all things that gave rise to sorrow, hoping to have only joy. They found joy had lost its savor in the absence of sorrow, and lost their will to live.
The issue is that the Ea realized that they can't solve that problem. To quote the Ea
All their knowledge yielded no solution and that broke them.Coph-coodg: In hopes of proving that this determination was erroneous, we scrutinized our research from all angles, even as we sought to avert the everlasting winter. The endeavor proved fruitless. So infamously so, in fact, that it became synonymous with vain effort. The universe as we know it would end, and there is no way to prevent it.
True to an extent. Suggest to a scientist that Newtons laws or General Relativity is wrong and you'd have to show evidence. Hell take the current scholarship on climate change for example. Most are pretty forthright about how depressing the future is.
And I disagree. I see the currents of the Plenty and the Ea in antinatalism, nihilism, and various other philosophical beliefs and I don't believe those are only believed by idiots.
Would peer review change the answer Meteion found? Would it change the fact that Ancient society is primed to kill itself, as Hermes points out? Emet agrees with his argument there as well.
Except we didn't go to the moon. We fought for the other path and won. The path she laid for us and believed we were capable of walking. So she was right!
The Ancients made no attempt to face suffering and in fact made it impossible for anyone to do so. If the Ancients wished to face Meteion they would need to do three things.
1. Sunder themselves or reduce their aether to dramatically lower levels in order to manipulate dynamis and face non-voluntary death.
2. Seal away Zodiark to prevent him from answering their self imposed suffering
3. Dedicate all of their resources to finding a way to Ultima
The Ancients we see in Endwalker and Shadowbringers repeatedly reject suffering as a concept, forming a society without personal expression and one that instead focuses solely on "perfecting" the star. In both expansions we see others say that this will inevitably lead to Dead End, as without a different purpose Ancient society would end itself. On top of that, the Ancients when faced with mortality where so traumatized and broken the event seared itself onto their souls and pushed them to create a god capable of not only stopping the crisis but undoing it entirely, at high cost.
They traded their future for their past willingly. Thus do I agree with Venat, they would not willingly walk the path. Because who would right?
This realization leads to the Sundering and why I personally find it to be the right move. I can understand why others find it disagreeable, Venat herself had doubts, but for humanity to survive other options do not exist. Telling the Ancients of Meteion would not change what needed to be done, or the actions required to change things. They would have to abandon their previous world and embark on a new path. I don't think they would.
And Crowny let me say I appreciate your perspective as well! This has been one of the more enjoyable conversations on this topic and I have a lot of respect for your opinion on it!

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