Thanks! I've only just started reading and there's really good stuff here.
My own take: in order for the zeitgeist to be optimistic on progress, it has to seem possible for things to get better. And for things to get better, it has to be possible for them to be good. But in most forums, I find, it's almost impossible to call anything good without being torn to shreds from multiple sides. We've raised the bar beyond what mere mortals can achieve, and retroactively damn the past's achievements by applying standards that even now are very far from universal. It's like Calvinist predestination, but the total number of the elect is zero, so there's not much social incentive to bother trying to improve things. Thankfully, most people try to be and go good anyway, based on their understanding of what that means.
> Control-f "cold war"
> No results found
Asimov and the Apollo engineers grew up benefiting from progress; their children grew up doing duck-and-cover exercises, hiding from it under their desks. Of course they relate to it differently!
This theory predicts that people who grew up after the cold war ended should be more prone to celebrate progress. I think that's true: if you go to silicon valley, where the young inventors are, messianic excitement over the power of progress is easy to find. Isaac Asimov wanted to put an RTG in your refrigerator, and Vitalik Buterin wants to put your mortgage on the blockchain; to me they have very similar energies.
Big Think magazine has a special issue on progress out today, featuring writers including Tyler Cowen, Charles Kenny, Brad Delong, Kevin Kelly, Jim Pethokoukis, Eli Dourado, Hannah Ritchie, Alec Stapp, Saloni Dattani, and yours truly.
My piece is a revised and expanded version of “We need a new philosophy of progress,” including material from “Why do we need a NEW philosophy of progress?” and from recent talks I’ve given. Here’s an excerpt from the opening:
Read the whole thing at Big Think.