Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)
Here are the remaining ten chapters in the long middle section of the book that focuses on Progress. Some of these update topics from BETTER ANGELS, and remind of us to take statistical approaches to safety, terrorism, and so on. Beware headlines; look at the data. Overall, liberal values are spreading around the world. The chapter on Knowledge has two great quotes about the value of education and the awareness of one’s place in the world. Two chapters consider, if things have gotten so much better, why aren’t we happier? And concludes that the evidence we’re unhappy is unpersuasive, and the reason we’re not happier is due to humanity’s gradual maturity in an ever-more complex world. A chapter on existential threats finds most such risks unlikely. And a chapter on the future of progress worries about two threats: economic stagnation, and the rise of authoritarian populism, on the latter point specifically addressing the danger Trump represents to all the good news from the previous chapters. Recommendations: rely on the resilience of the American system; recognize that Trump voters are of the lower classes with low educations, who are older and more religious. So avoid polarizing rhetoric, and fix the election system. There will always be setbacks, but there’s a dialectic that nevertheless moves us forward.









