>>1493
>The end of historical documentation in all its forms will likely come with the death of mankind.
This is a very interesting statement. Not sure I'd be willing to go along with it, though, unless you understand mankind to be inherently progressive and progression to be reliant on documentation.
Situations that don't involve change would not require documentation and could thus qualify. But it doesn't have to mean death of mankind. If a stable situation (e.g. that of a blissful, genetically-triggered permanent state of happiness) even allows for the possibility of change (which, in a universe not 100% under our control is always the case), then there can be grounds for a notion of historicity. Though I suspect the problem here is whether it is "history" if it is not percieved as such.