I would argue that this boom is a result primarily of liberalism. Leftism was left in the dust because it fosters stagnation. — frank
I propose that in general, human societies that maximize individual satisfaction and empowerment will become stagnant. The mechanism is not so much a deadening of ambitions by satisfaction, but by a loss of a society's ability to marshall resources and labor toward a small number of goals.
On the other hand, a society that concentrates its wealth, rendering most of the population dependent for survival on a few, will naturally exhibit technological progress in proportion to that concentration — frank
The world has seen what I think is an unprecedented technological boom starting in the 19th Century, but particularly escalating in the 1980s. — frank
human societies that maximize individual satisfaction and empowerment will become stagnant. — frank
a loss of a society's ability to marshall resources and labor toward a small number of goals. — frank
By "liberalism" do you mean a belief in progress? — T Clark
You have not expressed any value judgement about the differences between a satisfied, stagnant society and a progressive society with wealth concentration — T Clark
Maybe you're asking whether continued, long-term satisfaction is possible without progress. — T Clark
If climate change brings the hammer down on civilization, we might eventually return to Bronze Age culture, which was stagnant. But the average person would know of no alternative, so wouldn't attribute any suffering to it. — frank
A number of current economists argue that compared to the industrial revolution, the digital revolution has produced paltry results in terms od the raising of living standards and labor productivity. — Joshs
I don’t see how promoting individual satisfaction and empowerment is at odds with economic innovation. In fact I think they are inseparably linked. — Joshs
How do we as a society determine which goals are most worthy of focusing resources on? I — Joshs
And why is it necessary to make a choice? — Joshs
Even without some sort of civilization-wide catastrophe, the Earth's population is predicted to stop growing in the next 50 to 100 years. That's when we'll find out whether a society and economy without growth can work. You and I won't be here to see. It will be interesting, but I worry for my children and their children. — T Clark
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