Is Progress Good for Humanity?
Rethinking the narrative of economic development, with sustainability in mind
The story tends to go something like this: Inventors, economists, and statesmen in Western Europe dreamed up a new industrialized world. Fueled by the optimism and scientific know-how of the Enlightenment, a series of heroic men—James Watt, Adam Smith, William Huskisson, and so on—fought back against the stultifying effects of regulated economies, irrational laws and customs, and a traditional guild structure that quashed innovation. By the mid-19th century, they had managed to implement a laissez-faire (“free”) economy that ran on new machines and was centered around modern factories and an urban working class. It was a long and difficult process, but this revolution eventually brought Europeans to a new plateau of civilization. In the end, Europeans lived in a new world based on wage labor, easy mobility, and the consumption of sparkling products.
Sadly, this saccharine story still sweetens our societal self-image . . .
Read more at
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/09/the-industrial-revolution-and-its-discontents/379781/?utm_source=SFFB
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