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Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

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  • Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?



    Long before “sustainable” became a buzzword, intellectuals wondered how long industrial society could survive. In “The Idea of Decline in Western History,” after surveying predictions from the mid-19th century until today, the historian Arthur Herman identifies two consistently dominant schools of thought.

    The first school despairs because it foresees inevitable ruin. The second school is hopeful — but only because these intellectuals foresee ruin, too, and can hardly wait for the decadent modern world to be replaced by one more to their liking. Every now and then, someone comes along to note that society has failed to collapse and might go on prospering, but the notion is promptly dismissed in academia as happy talk from a simpleton.

    The Rational Optimist,” by Matt Ridley, does much more than debunk the doomsaying. Dr. Ridley provides a grand unified theory of history from the Stone Age to the better age awaiting us in 2100.

    It’s an audacious task, but he has the intellectual breadth for it. A trained zoologist and former editor at The Economist, Dr. Ridley has established himself in previous books, like “The Origins of Virtue” and “Genome,” as the supreme synthesist of lessons from anthropology, psychology, molecular genetics, economics and game theory. This time he takes on all of human history, starting with our mysteriously successful debut. What made Homo sapiens so special? Dr. Ridley argues that it wasn’t our big brain, because Neanderthals had a big brain, too. Nor was it our willingness to help one another, because apes and other social animals also had an instinct for reciprocity.

    “At some point,” Dr. Ridley writes, “after millions of years of indulging in reciprocal back-scratching of gradually increasing intensity, one species, and one alone, stumbled upon an entirely different trick. Adam gave Oz an object in exchange for a different object.”

    The evidence for this trick is in perforated seashells from more than 80,000 years ago that ended up far from the nearest coast, an indication that inlanders were bartering to get ornamental seashells from coastal dwellers. Unlike the contemporary Neanderthals, who apparently relied just on local resources, those modern humans could shop for imports.

    “The extraordinary promise of this event was that Adam potentially now had access to objects he did not know how to make or find; and so did Oz,” Dr. Ridley writes. People traded goods, services and, most important, knowledge, creating a collective intelligence: “Ten individuals could know between them ten things, while each understanding one.”

    As they specialized and exchanged, humans learned how to domesticate crops and animals and sell food to passing merchants. Traders congregated in the first cities and built ships that spread goods and ideas around the world.

    Rulers like to take credit for the advances during their reigns, and scientists like to see their theories as the source of technological progress. But Dr. Ridley argues that they’ve both got it backward: traders’ wealth builds empires, and entrepreneurial tinkerers are more likely to inspire scientists than vice versa. From Stone Age seashells to the steam engine to the personal computer, innovation has mostly been a bottom-up process.

    “Forget wars, religions, famines and poems for the moment,” Dr. Ridley writes. “This is history’s greatest theme: the metastasis of exchange, specialization and the invention it has called forth, the ‘creation’ of time.”

    You can appreciate the timesaving benefits through a measure devised by the economist William D. Nordhaus: how long it takes the average worker to pay for an hour of reading light. In ancient Babylon, it took more than 50 hours to pay for that light from a sesame-oil lamp. In 1800, it took more than six hours of work to pay for it from a tallow candle. Today, thanks to the countless specialists producing electricity and compact fluorescent bulbs, it takes less than a second. That technological progress, though, was sporadic. Innovation would flourish in one trading hub for a while but then stagnate, sometimes because of external predators — roving pirates, invading barbarians — but more often because of internal parasites, as Dr. Ridley writes:

    “Empires bought stability at the price of creating a parasitic court; monotheistic religions bought social cohesion at the expense of a parasitic priestly class; nationalism bought power at the expense of a parasitic military; socialism bought equality at the price of a parasitic bureaucracy; capitalism bought efficiency at the price of parasitic financiers.”

    “The modern world is a history of ideas meeting, mixing, mating and mutating,” Dr. Ridley writes. “And the reason that economic growth has accelerated so in the past two centuries is down to the fact that ideas have been mixing more than ever before.”

    Our progress is unsustainable, he argues, only if we stifle innovation and trade, the way China and other empires did in the past. Is that possible? Well, European countries are already banning technologies based on the precautionary principle requiring advance proof that they’re risk-free. Americans are turning more protectionist and advocating byzantine restrictions like carbon tariffs. Globalization is denounced by affluent Westerners preaching a return to self-sufficiency.

    But with new hubs of innovation emerging elsewhere, and with ideas spreading faster than ever on the Internet, Dr. Ridley expects bottom-up innovators to prevail. His prediction for the rest of the century: “Prosperity spreads, technology progresses, poverty declines, disease retreats, fecundity falls, happiness increases, violence atrophies, freedom grows, knowledge flourishes, the environment improves and wilderness expands.”

    If you’re not ready to trust an optimist, if you still fear a reckoning is at hand, you might consider the words of Thomas B. Macaulay, a British poet, historian and politician who criticized doomsayers of the mid-1800s.

    “We cannot absolutely prove,” he wrote, “that those are in error who tell us that society has reached a turning point, that we have seen our best days. But so said all who came before us, and with just as much apparent reason.”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/18/sc...ml?ref=science



  • #2
    Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

    Thanks Don. I needed a boost of optimism tonight.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

      i miss sapiens...
      Are You a Doomer?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

        “And the reason that economic growth has accelerated so in the past two centuries is down to the fact that ideas have been mixing more than ever before."

        I vote for oil. Without oil ideas would not "have been mixing more than ever before". I do not know about his book, but his web site only makes small mention of oil --> Basically, we do not need to worry... Natural gas from shale will save us until solar energy works better (2040s).

        I think:

        Oil ==> mixing of ideas --> improved economy

        But if he is right, maybe the formula will be more like this in the future:

        Internet--> mixing of ideas --> improved economy

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

          I read this article on the NYT. I don't really, really think we will all be living under Mad Max conditions in a few years... I have some faith in the inventiveness of mankind...

          But as a logical proof or debating tactic, this type of thing FAILs. It always just tickles me pink when some 'cornucopianist' argues that we don't need to worry about our approaching doom because we've always conquered approaching doom in the past.

          1) As we all know from investment prospectuses by now, "Past performance does not guarantee future results."

          Like the article admits in the final sentence quoted. If you were on a cruise ship, and the captain was steering straight towards an iceberg, would you feel re-assured when he says "This ship has survived hundreds of iceberg collisions in the past without a scratch!" I mean, that might be 100% true, but geez, why tempt Fate if you have an alternative. Steer away from the iceberg.

          2) Always, always, always, the 'cornucopainist' arugment reads like the following:

          "In the past humankind has always risen to meet great challenges, by turning their panic at the approaching danger into drive and determination, and fighting for their lives through great social turmoil and dislocation, the desperation inspiring flashes of genius, to change the entire paradigm of what went before. Therefore, in a complete reversal of historical precedent, I am advising everyone to ignore the approaching danger, sit back, stay comfortable, and don't worry your little heads about it. We can just keep sailing on autopilot the way we've been doing and not change anything, and everything will turn out just fine."

          These 'cornucopainists' are always arguing that mankind has conquered past problems by making their solving a priority -- and then in the next breath saying, "So therefore we don't need to make this current problem a priority." They don't explicitly say to abandon the priority in their argument, but their argument is always, always a counter-argument trying to defeat somebody who wants to make the problem a priority. I mean, in terms of metaphorically shooting ourselves in the foot, it doesn't get much clearer than that.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

            Mr. Ridley should read The Fourth Turning. (Perhaps he already has.)

            Then he should take a good look at the epidemic of corruption, greed, dependency,
            moral and spiritual decay, antiethical business practices and arrogance that permiates
            American institutions and society before displaying such confident optimism.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

              I do not find critique's of cornucopainist's, nor anticipations of a Fourth Turning, to be in conflict with Mr. Ridley's analysis.

              Human civilization can have a dreadful time of it in the next decade or two, even as it might blossom far further in the next millennium or two. The advancement of civilization is fractal. Mr. Ridley is making no effort to provide investment advice to High Frequency Traders.
              Most folks are good; a few aren't.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

                OK, so as Dr. Ridley says in the article:

                “Forget wars, religions, famines and poems for the moment,” Dr. Ridley writes.
                Let's just say that's easier said than done...

                In the long run, humanity may well survive and prosper. OK fine. Don't force me to resort to Keynes on you, regarding the "long run". ;)
                Last edited by necron99; May 19, 2010, 04:34 PM. Reason: courtesy smiley

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                • #9
                  Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

                  Originally posted by necron99 View Post
                  In the long run, humanity may well survive and prosper. OK fine. Don't force me to resort to Keynes on you, regarding the "long run".
                  Do not fear. I am an old man. I will not force you to remind me that when I predict two decades of hell, and two millennia of bliss, I will likely only get to see the hell.
                  Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Is Your Doomsday Lamp Lit?

                    Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View Post
                    Do not fear. I am an old man. I will not force you to remind me that when I predict two decades of hell, and two millennia of bliss, I will likely only get to see the hell.
                    Two millennia of bliss? Now that sounds like hell.

                    Comment

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