by Rod_Cloutier » Wed 19 Jan 2005, 19:26:51
I have also just finished reading "The progress Paradox" by Gregg Easterbrook. I found the book excellent reading for his synopsis of modern day ills. In particular he developed 3 strong assertions in regards to why people feel worse while the economy continues to grow.
1) Choice anixiety- With ever more choices and personal freedom, this creates constant anixiety as one never really knows if they are making the best possible choice. As well as generallized feelings of regret when choices are made.
2) Collapse anixiety- the majority of people feel society can't go on like it has been. That resources will be depleted, growth will stop, incomes will decline, ect. (Its worth noting he doesn't believe in the collapse- by extrapolating and using our past successes and progress as indicative of our future potential)
3) Corruption - Corruption of our modern corporations, the Republican US administration and tyranny in the 3rd world are shown as limiting factors preventing us from exporting our success worldwide.
I found his book compelling, well researched and easy to read. However he seems to have a shallow list of the world problems. Global warming and corruption being the "only real problems" our modern society needs to worry about. This seems a little nieve when problems like long term water and food resources are weighed against currect global population growth (and are dismissed as solveable). Innumerable other problems exist in the world and despite his assertion that "everthing is getting better everywhere" this seems little silly.
For the future he feels we can become happier by becoming socially more active in taking western ideals to the rest of the world. That happiness always comes from within and cannot be bought by any amount of money or wealth. Also in his closing chapter he says:
"No one can say what the future may hold- nuclear war, new dictatorships, horrible errors of genetic engineering, a comet strike, other things that could go badly wrong. But it is not out of the question that someday the suburban utopia sketched...will more or less come to pass: that everyone in the West, perhaps even everyone in every nation, will have access to whatever material things they require without money anxiety, while living very long lives in slender good health with recreation and romance and in a world finally at peace"
A final cop-out saying he has no real suggestions on how the world will progress. None the less entralling reading!