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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: James McCain <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 12:17 PM
Subject: Restoring Human Progress
To: [email protected]


This new book might be of interest:



*Restoring Human Progress   by   Professor Rick Szostak*
**

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1907962700


**
*Book Description:*


Is human progress possible? If so, how can it be achieved? Many progressive
intellectuals and activists once turned to socialism for answers to both
questions, but such individuals generally now appreciate that the answers
provided were simplistic and misguided in important respects. Many have
thus embraced nihilism, doubting that human progress is achievable or even
conceivable. Such individuals then necessarily turn away from efforts to
create a better world. The world would benefit from the outline of a
coherent program for human progress that manages to escape the
simplifications inevitable in adherence to one narrow ideological
perspective. This book aims to describe such a program. Some elements of
this program are concrete enough for activists to advocate immediately. In
other cases there is much work for intellectuals to do in further
clarifying the best policies for a society to undertake. This book is
intended to revitalize the efforts of both intellectuals and activists.

Whereas a generation or two ago there was widespread confidence that
economic growth, technological advance, and/or the spread of democracy
would gradually create a better world, many today fear that these processes
generate more problems than they solve. This skepticism regarding the
possibility of progress is closely associated with three other attitudes.
There is widespread doubt, at least among the intellectual class, that
human reason and ingenuity can solve the world's problems. This doubt is
related to a concern that the contemporary world is too complex and
unpredictable for purposeful human action to have much impact on the future
course of events. Finally, there is doubt that there are universal ethical
standards: if humanity cannot agree on what is the nature of the good life,
we can hardly work toward progress nor recognize it if we achieve it.

This book starts from a belief that there is considerable merit in these
four related concerns. However, it will be argued that they need not lead
to despair: the idea of human progress is still viable, though progress is
not inevitable. This book will therefore outline a variety of goals for
both activists and intellectuals to pursue in order to generate a
progressive future for humanity.  The legitimate concerns noted above
regarding complexity, ethics, and the exercise of reason must first be
addressed; it will turn out that answers to these three critiques will
provide coherence to the various reform initiatives to be outlined.
Firstly, a universal ethics can (ironically) be grounded in diversity by
appreciating that diverse ethical perspectives often point in the same
direction. This book identifies five types of ethical analysis and an
'ethical core' of statements supported by each of these. Secondly,
complexity can be coped with in both scholarship and public policy analysis
through the pursuit of interdisciplinarity and by organizing human
understanding in terms of exhaustive classifications of the phenomena
studied and theories and methods applied.  These classifications are
provided, as is a best-practice process of interdisciplinary analysis.
Finally, the role of reason in human affairs can be enhanced by identifying
and pursuing higher standards of human discourse.

How can we know that progress is neither impossible nor inevitable? The
book performs a broad historical survey. This analysis hinges on an
argument that it is indeed possible - indeed relatively straightforward -
to identify what most people would consider as progressive with respect to
a broad range of phenomena: higher incomes, less disease, more freedom, and
cleaner environments. The book then evaluates whether progress has been
achieved with respect to a wide array of phenomena over three time periods:
the last couple of decades, the last couple of centuries, and the last
couple of millennia. Regardless of the time period chosen, progress is
observed for many phenomena, regress for many others, and both/neither for
still others. Note that such a broad historical survey has never previously
been performed. One important purpose of this survey is to overcome
simplistic treatments of the subject of human progress: optimists all too
often emphasize economic advances while pessimists stress environmental or
cultural regress. Discourse regarding the possibility of human progress
would be better grounded in a more nuanced understanding of human history.

For the purposes of this book, the survey serves a further critical
purpose. Confidence in human progress can only be restored if viable
policies exist to encourage this in those areas in which regress has been
observed over at least one of the three historical time periods. Too much
of the discourse on human progress assumes that certain types of progress -
economic or political or cultural - are all-important. Widespread belief in
progress requires a program that works toward progress across all
phenomena. The final chapters of the book outline such a set of
strategies.  That is, for each phenomenon for which regress is observed
historically it is asked whether there are strategies for achieving future
progress.  In some cases, the way forward is already fairly clear.  In
other cases it is necessary to perform further research in order to
identify the path forward.  Yet in all cases it is possible to hold out
reasonable hope of future progress.  And notably the various strategies are
complementary: progress can be achieved across all phenomena. As noted
above these various strategies do not depend on any simple ideology.  The
book is thus in full accord with postmodern suspicion of meta-narratives
(grand explanations of everything or at least many things) while
nevertheless transcending postmodern nihilism. It thus holds out hope for a
brighter future, but a hope grounded in an appreciation of the complexity
of the world rather than some over-simplistic ideology or grand theory.

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