I believe that technology elevates us to the point where cultural evolution out-strips biological evolution.
At this point we have too much influence over our environment, but not yet the wisdom to control that influence, as we are still enslaved to the negative selection processes that drove us here; ie. the acquisition and maintenance of power, which continue to drive us into an unsustainable ecological position.
This is the metastatic tipping point that we now face.
It's a paradoxical equilibrium, where the very thing that drives us to our future is the same thing that limits our progression.
This is a natural homeostatic feedback that is baked into any living population, but it is especially prominent in a species intelligent enough to develop technology such as agriculture, industry, computers, the internet and artificial intelligence.
LOL the last one is particular telling as to the culprit of all this.
It may be possible to achieve the wisdom to survive, but generally this is only gained through experience. And that experience is by way of Malthusian Catastrophe.
We have to fall down before we figure out how to stand up and run, and in many ways we are still infants in that regard, going through a particularly painful process of growing up. Without that process though, there can be no adulthood and it may be that we won't reach that phase if we can't figure out how to grow up as a species.