Towards Genuine Progress
Towards Genuine Progress
Margaret
Emerson suggests that progress should mean working within the Earth’s
limits to ensure that people aren’t just well-off financially, but happy and
healthy. In other words, there is need to narrow the gap between the very rich
and the desperately poor, because progress can’t just mean the improvement of
the lives of 5% of the population. In Emerson’s view, progress means peace, and
cooperation, and more beauty in the world. Progress should mean that we put our
collective energy into elevating our spiritual and emotional growth. It ought
to aim at increasing beauty, happiness and well-being of all.
Viewed in
a broad spectrum, progress in Capitalist parlance is construed as a good
thing, manifest destiny, civilizing the uncivilized, elevating the poor
inhabitants, taming nature, not being at its mercy, and having more time for
leisure and the opportunity to be wealthy and comfortable. According to a study
conducted by economists Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers of University of
Pennsylvania, there is a need to examine thus far unexamined assumptions
because despite our push toward that sort of economic and social “progress”,
most Americans are no happier today than they were in the 1970s. Despite some
‘Progress Milestones, in science, technology, transport, medicine, economy,
telecommunications and other realms, the endless scramble for progress has
brought forth environmentally destructive practices whereby more consumption
means more pollution, more rain forests cut down to accommodate agriculture,
more trees cut to manufacture paper for magazines and junk mail.
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