AU
  
You are currently viewing the Australia version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
15 MIN READ TIME

Why We Can’t Acknowledge Progress

—KENDRICK FRAZIER

I grew up in the 1950s when, for the most part, people seemed optimistic and positive about the world (if we didn’t blow ourselves up with atomic bombs). All things seemed possible. Today, in stark contrast, we seem immersed in a sour milieu in which many think the world is worse than ever and things are going to hell. You can always find abundant examples to support that view (or any other view), but what do the data show?

In his new book Enlightenment Now, Steven Pinker not only strongly defends science, humanism, and the ideals of the Enlightenment—ideals we strongly support—but also excoriates educated people for their consistent negativism and pessimism. In fact, in an extended excerpt titled “Progressophobia” that we publish in this issue, he contends that intellectuals hate the very idea of progress. If so, is that perhaps because if things are getting better, we fear that our various efforts to improve the world lose their power? That’s part of it. But Pinker shows that our current sour view comes primarily from a system of psychological biases and mental bugs that cause us to accentuate the negative and downplay the positive. Couple that with natural journalistic tendencies to emphasize bad news over good (not news)—and a demonstrated worsening trend in that regard—and we have a clear recipe for seeing things through ever-darkening glasses. And that prevents us from noticing and acknowledging widespread improvements in human conditions that are indeed happening globally. In our article, Pinker responds to critics of his previous book, The Better Angels of Our Nature, in which he persuasively demonstrated that worldwide and in historical perspective violence has gone down. In his new book he demonstrates, with detailed and credible data, that historically and globally we have also seen long-term improvements in life, health, sustenance, wealth, inequality, the environment, peace, safety, terrorism, democracy, equal rights, knowledge, quality of life, and happiness.

If that seems counterintuitive to you, you are not alone. Most educated people find this difficult to believe. Our blinders are on. But scientific skeptics should go where the evidence leads. Pinker argues the case eloquently and, I think, effectively, drawing on both the demographic data and our improved understanding of human biases that get in our way of seeing the truth. I urge you to follow his reasoning carefully. Pinker is one of our most distinguished public intellectuals and a long-time fellow of our Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. You may disagree with him, but you better bring better data with you to the fight.

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of Skeptical Inquirer
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue May June 2018
 
$7.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. Skeptical Inquirer
Annual Digital Subscription $25.99 billed annually
Save
4%
$4.33 / issue

This article is from...


View Issues
Skeptical Inquirer
May June 2018
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


NEWS AND COMMENT
‘Ballistic Missile Threat Inbound … This is Not a Drill’: The Formidable Threat of False Alarms
At approximately 8:07 am on January 13, 2018, the state
Barry Williams, Pioneering Australian Skeptic, Dies at Seventy-Nine
Barry Williams, founder of the Australian Skeptics, has died. Tim
Michael Mann Receives AAAS Public Engagement with Science Award
Newly elected CSI Fellow Michael E. Mann has been awarded
Bertha Vazquez Given NABT Evolution Education Award
Bertha Vazquez, director of the Teacher Institute for Evolutionary Science
COMMENTARIES
Why Did We Call Prince Charles Foolish and Immoral?
I was recently reported for calling Britain’s heir to the
Flat-Earth Anxieties Reflect Misplaced Priorities
Somehow, some way, the flat-earth movement continues to make waves
SPECIAL REPORT
A Doctoral Dissertation on a Geocentric Flat Earth
‘Zetetic’1 Astronomy at the University Level
INVESTIGATIVE FILES
Navy Pilot’s 2004 UFO: A Comedy of Errors
Joe Nickell, PhD, is CSI’s senior research fellow and, among
NOTES ON A STRANGE WORLD
Does the Vatican Hold a Painting of a UFO?
Massimo Polidoro is an investigator of the paranormal, lecturer, and
BEHAVIOR & BELIEF
William James and the Psychics
Stuart Vyse is a psychologist and author of Believing in
SKEPTICAL INQUIREE
The Case of the Curious Christmas Light
Benjamin Radford is a research fellow at the Committee for
FEATURES
PROGRESS OPHOBIA Why Things Are Better Than You Think They Are
Intellectuals dislike the very idea of progress. Our own mental bugs also distort our understanding of the world, blinding us to improvements in the human condition underway globally—and to the ideas that have made them possible
Trauma and Taboo
Traumatic Memories Are Alive and Well and Eating Your Innards Out
Percival Lowell and the Canals of Mars
The ‘canals’ of Mars don’t exist, and they never did; yet they were repeatedly reported and defended as scientific realities by many great astronomers. Why?
The Curious Question of Ghost Taxonomy
The nature of ghosts remains unknown despite centuries of collective effort by legions of ghost hunters
Sorry, ‘Theistic Science’ Is Not Science
A critical examination of the book Who Was Adam? demonstrates that creationism is not science
The 1849 Balvullich Ice Fall
A mass of solid ice weighing nearly a ton fell on a Scottish farm on the estate at Ord during a thunderstorm on July 30, 1849. Theories abound as to its origin, some more fanciful than others. New analysis suggests that the ice originated locally and did not fall from the sky, as has long been thought
REVIEWS
The Fortieth Anniversary of E.O. Wilson’s
On Human Nature
Following Disgraced Doctor Andrew Wakefield
In her documentary about the disgraced doctor most identified as
Scientific American Collection on the Science about Controversial Issues
The Winter 2017/2018 “Special Collector’s Edition” of Scientific American is
Reconsidering Monsters
The Most Hated Man in America: Jerry Sandusky and the
NEW AND NOTABLE
NEW AND NOTABLE
Listing does not preclude future review
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
A Skeptic’s Guide to Racism
I want no more issues sent. I am specifically and
THE LAST LAUGH
The Take a Wish Foundation
As I write this we are a few days away