The Arc of Progress in the 21st Century / DAVOS 2025
22 Jan 2025 10:30h - 11:00h
The Arc of Progress in the 21st Century / DAVOS 2025
Session at a Glance
Summary
Steven Pinker’s talk focuses on the arc of progress in the 21st century, examining various measures of human flourishing over time. He argues that despite common perceptions, the world has made significant progress in many areas. Pinker presents data on life expectancy, health, sustenance, prosperity, peace, democracy, rights, violent crime, knowledge, and happiness, showing long-term positive trends in most categories.
He explains why progress often seems elusive, citing the nature of news media and cognitive biases that emphasize negative events. Pinker argues that a data-driven approach provides a more accurate picture of global progress. While acknowledging recent setbacks in areas like democracy and peace, he emphasizes that these reversals haven’t erased long-term gains.
Pinker attributes progress to humanity’s capacity for knowledge and sympathy, supported by institutions that promote reason and expand our circle of concern. He discusses challenges to these institutions but suggests there’s resilience in social systems that tend towards progress.
In the Q&A, Pinker addresses concerns about institutions in crisis, suggesting that despite challenges, there’s an underlying trend towards greater cooperation and welfare. He also discusses the backtrend in women’s rights and proposes ways to improve news reporting to better reflect progress alongside challenges.
The discussion concludes with reflections on the importance of maintaining perspective on progress while acknowledging ongoing problems, and the need for more data-driven, historically-informed journalism.
Keypoints
Major discussion points:
– Progress in human flourishing over time, as measured by various metrics like life expectancy, health, prosperity, peace, etc.
– The inherent bias of news media against showing progress, and how this skews public perception
– Recent trends in global progress, including areas of continued improvement and some backsliding
– Why progress is difficult but possible, due to human cognitive abilities and institutions that expand knowledge and empathy
– Challenges to institutions that have enabled progress, and the need to support them
Overall purpose:
The goal of this discussion was to provide a data-driven perspective on long-term human progress, counter pessimistic narratives, and encourage continued support for institutions and approaches that have improved human wellbeing.
Tone:
The overall tone was optimistic yet measured. Steven Pinker presented an upbeat view of human progress while acknowledging setbacks and challenges. He maintained a calm, academic tone throughout, using data to support his points. The Q&A section had a slightly more concerned tone as audience members raised issues about threats to progress, but Pinker’s responses remained cautiously optimistic.
Speakers
– Steven Pinker: Cognitive psychologist, linguist, and author
– Audience: Attendees at the event asking questions
Additional speakers:
– Paula Escobar Chavez: Audience member asking a question (specific role/title not mentioned)
Full session report
Steven Pinker’s Talk on Progress in the 21st Century
Introduction:
Steven Pinker, a cognitive psychologist, linguist, and author, delivered a talk focusing on the arc of progress in the 21st century. The discussion examined various measures of human flourishing over time, presenting a data-driven perspective on long-term human progress to counter pessimistic narratives and encourage continued support for institutions that have improved human wellbeing.
Long-term Trends in Human Progress:
Pinker presented compelling evidence of significant progress in numerous areas of human development:
– Life expectancy has increased dramatically from 30 years to over 70 years
– Global extreme poverty rates have fallen from 90% to less than 9%
– Literacy rates have improved worldwide from 15% to 80%
– Violence and war have declined overall
– Education has become more widespread
These improvements demonstrate substantial advancements in health, sustenance, prosperity, peace, democracy, rights, reduction in violent crime, knowledge, and happiness. Pinker emphasised that long-term positive trends are evident in most categories, even when accounting for recent setbacks.
Why Progress is Hard and How it Happens:
Pinker addressed the disconnect between actual progress and public perception, attributing this to:
– The nature of news media, which tends to focus on sudden, negative events rather than gradual improvements
– News reports changes, not persistent trends
– Good things often consist of non-events, which are not newsworthy
He argued that a data-driven approach provides a more accurate picture of global progress than relying solely on news reports or personal impressions.
Pinker attributed human progress to several key factors:
– Human cognitive abilities that allow us to use knowledge to improve well-being
– Institutions like science, scholarly societies, and responsible journalism that help overcome cognitive biases
– An expanding circle of sympathy that allows concern for wider humanity (the “better angels of our nature”)
– Reason, which helps us solve problems and create beneficial innovations
Recent Data on Progress (since 2015):
While maintaining an overall optimistic stance, Pinker acknowledged several challenges to continued progress:
– Recent setbacks in areas like democracy and peace
– Crises facing some democratic institutions
– Backsliding on women’s rights in recent years
He argued that despite these challenges, there’s resilience in social systems that tend towards progress, and that recent reversals haven’t erased long-term gains. Pinker cited specific data sources, such as VDEM for women’s rights data, to support his arguments.
Reflections on the Nature of Progress:
Pinker discussed the capacity for progress, quoting David Deutsch on the achievability of progress and Arnold Toynbee on the transformative nature of the 20th century. He emphasized the importance of supporting and trusting institutions that have historically driven human flourishing to maintain and further human welfare.
Q&A Session:
The subsequent Q&A session allowed audience members to raise concerns and seek clarification:
1. Institutional Crises:
Paula Escobar Chavez pointed out that many institutions supporting human progress are currently in crisis. Pinker acknowledged this concern but maintained that there’s an underlying trend towards greater cooperation and welfare.
2. Women’s Rights:
An audience member raised the issue of recent backtracking in women’s rights. Pinker recognised this as an area of concern but suggested examining the specific factors causing this regression to address the issue effectively.
3. News Media Reform:
The discussion touched on ways to improve news reporting to better reflect progress alongside challenges. Pinker proposed more data-driven, historically-informed journalism to provide a balanced perspective on global trends. He suggested incorporating more data journalism and historical context in news reporting.
Conclusion:
The discussion concluded with reflections on the importance of maintaining perspective on progress while acknowledging ongoing problems. Pinker’s talk and the subsequent Q&A session highlighted the complex nature of assessing global progress and the challenges in maintaining positive trends. The overall tone remained cautiously optimistic, emphasising the need for continued support of institutions that have historically driven human flourishing while addressing current obstacles to progress.
Session Transcript
Steven Pinker: Hello. My name is Steve Pinker, and I’m going to speak to you today about the arc of progress in the 21st century, which immediately raises some questions. What is progress? How can we tell whether there has been progress? Are we making progress today? And why is progress so hard, and how can it happen at all? Can anyone answer, really define progress, say what it is? Well, here’s an attempt. I would say most would agree that progress would consist in improvements in human flourishing. What do I mean by human flourishing? Again, not that hard to define. It comprises life, health, sustenance, prosperity, peace, freedom, safety, knowledge, happiness, things that all of us strive for, for ourselves that we can’t deny to the rest of humanity, and that are pretty much prerequisites to our being here and having this conversation in the first place. If these have increased over time, I would call that progress. Has there been progress? Well, here is a way not to tell whether there has been progress, and that is to follow the news. The news is a systematically misleading way to assess whether the world has been making progress. Not because editors have a bias toward the negative, though they do, but because the very nature of news is biased against showing progress. For one thing, news is about stuff that happens, not stuff that doesn’t happen. And most things that happen suddenly are bad things. Many good things consist of things that don’t happen at all. A school that was not shot up by a rampage killer, a city that was not attacked by terrorists, a country that’s at peace. None of those make news, even if they have increased over time. News is what happens suddenly, not what happens gradually. If 100,000 people escaped from extreme poverty yesterday, and the day before, and the day before that, that’s not news. And news is what changes, not what persists. If every year the world gets a little richer, a little longer-lived, well, that’s pretty boring. It happened last year, too. You can even imagine a hypothetical extreme. Consider some measure of well-being that increases most years, say nine out of every ten years. Every tenth year, there is a step back. Well, this year, nothing newsworthy happened, because it’s the same as 14 out of the last 15 years. And this year, nothing happened. But then, all of a sudden, if it goes in the wrong direction, well, that’s news. And 10 years later, there is a backtracking, and that’s news, and so on. And so over a period of 40 years, all of the news stories that you have read are about things getting worse, even though the overwhelming trend is for things to have gotten better. Still worse, the nature of news interacts with two of our cognitive biases. The availability bias, namely, we tend to assess probability and risk in terms of how easily examples come to mind, things that are available in memory, images and anecdotes and narratives, and the news is an availability machine. And the negativity bias, that is, bad registers more strongly in our minds than good. If you combine the very nature of news with the way that we tend to process events, you naturally come away with the impression that everything is getting worse and always has been. A better way to tell whether there’s been progress is to plot data on human well-being over time. Now, I’ve tried to do that in two books, The Better Angels of Our Nature and Enlightenment Now. Last time I was on this stage, six years ago, I spoke about Enlightenment Now, and those data, since it takes a few years to accumulate data, were largely from 2015. And as of then, it was, I think, safe to say that the world had never been healthier, richer, safer, happier, or better educated compared to any period in the past. And it’s in recognition of trends like that that in what now seems like a very long time ago, the President of the United States, Barack Obama, said, if you had to choose a moment in history to be born and you did not know ahead of time who you’d be, you’d choose now. That was back in 2016. Okay, well, that was then. And frequently asked questions are, were the trends cherry-picked? Did they just happen to catch the world at a lucky high point? And hasn’t the world fallen apart since then? That’s what I’m going to speak about this morning. I’m going to take a look at how is the world doing now? What is the most recent report card on human flourishing in the world today? So I’ll show you data on the state of the world today compared to past decades and centuries, but also compared to 2015, the last data that I presented here, and the basis for Obama’s rather optimistic summary of the world. Well, let’s begin with the most basic thing of all, life. For most of human history, life expectancy at birth was pinned at about 30 years, then expanding around the 19th century because of advances in public health and medicine and prosperity, life expectancy at birth increased to more than 70 years. That is not only do we have extra life, but we have an extra life. It’s as if we’ve been granted two lives compared to our ancestors. Now, like all trends, all measures of human progress, it is not monotonic. There can be setbacks. Most recently, of course, the COVID pandemic, which resulted in that backtracking. But when the pandemic came under control, thanks to vaccines, the progress resumed, and humans have now a longer expected life than they did at any previous time in history. Now, as they say about getting older, the problem with getting older and living longer is that the extra years come at the end when you’re old. And so this would be a dubious measure of progress if it simply consisted of more years bedridden in an old age home. But if you – I’m sorry, before I – no, I will go to that. But if you look at measures of health, that is, years lost to death and disability, then you see that that has gone down since records were first kept, with an obvious reversal during the COVID pandemic, but we lose fewer years to disease and disability than we ever have in the past. Let me just backtrack now to the rest of the world, to breaking it down by continent. As you can see, there are still pretty big disparities in different regions of the world, North America, Europe, Latin America, Asia, and Africa, and we will obviously want those gaps to disappear. But every region of the world has shown progress in extending life expectancy. Sustenance. Famine was one of the four horsemen of the apocalypse, and food doesn’t fall from the sky, so it is a constant threat to human well-being. In the last couple of hundred years, the population of the world has increased by about seven-fold, from about a billion to eight billion, leading to obvious predictions that widespread famines would be inevitable, from Thomas Malthus, of course, and more recently from Paul Ehrlich. But if you plot famines over time, it’s actually gone in the other direction. Thanks to advances in agronomy, the Green Revolution, and ability to move food from farm to table, famines are close to an all-time low. Let’s zoom in on the most recent period. Here you see that there is, again, some unevenness across the world. Undernourishment, which is less severe than famine but still of concern, is still pretty much along the floor in the affluent parts of the world, Europe and North America, still in decline in Asia and Latin America, although with a little bit of backtracking. In Africa, there has been a rather tragic reversal in the decline in undernourishment, though not wiping out the progress that was enjoyed before that time, but another area of concern against a backdrop of overall progress. Prosperity. As economists point out, poverty needs no explanation. It’s the natural state of humanity what needs an explanation is wealth. And for most of human history, there was no increase in wealth, no economic growth. This graph, really from the long view, starting at the year one, shows that for most of human history, economic growth was less than one pixel high. Then the Industrial Revolution happened, capture of energy, markets, and other financial institutions, and economic growth increased exponentially, increasing by a factor of more than 100. If we zoom in on the most recent period, since the 1990s, we see that after 2015, and despite some backtracking during the pandemic, global world product has continued to increase, and the world is richer today than it has been at any time in the past. Now, if all of the gains went to the proverbial 1%, this would be a dubious example of progress. But in fact, it has also lifted up the poorest on Earth. 200 years ago, about 90% of humanity lived in what today we would call extreme poverty. That fell to less than 9% by the 21st century. And if we zoom in on the last few decades, then we see that the progress against reducing extreme poverty, although again, had a backtrack during the COVID pandemic, the progress resumed, and there are fewer poor people, extremely poor people today than at any time in history, even though there are far more many of us altogether. Peace. For most of human history, the natural state of relations between empires and great powers was war, and peace was merely a brief interlude between wars, culminating over the course of the 20th century with the two horrific spikes of bloodletting corresponding to the two world wars. But then an unexpected thing happened, despite predictions when I grew up that a third world war, a thermonuclear war between the United States and Soviet Union was inevitable. World War III didn’t happen. Wars between great powers ceased, and wars of all kinds diminished in frequency and magnitude. Now, there’s a period called the Long Peace. Now, if we zoom in on this period, we see a disconcerting backtracking over the last few years because of the wars in Ukraine, in Ethiopia, in Sudan, and in Gaza. War deaths have increased. This is a terrible tragedy, deeply concerning, although it is, like many reversals of progress, it’s worth keeping in perspective that although it is a backtracking, it has not come close to erasing the progress that we have had over the last few decades, and it is not true, as some journalists say, that the wars in Gaza and Ukraine are unprecedented in size. They’re actually quite moderate compared to wars that the world went through in my lifetime. Democracy and rights and freedom. We’ve read much about the recession in democracy, and a quantitative index in electoral democracy shows that it is a real thing. Over the last decade or so, there has been a decline in electoral democracy and in liberal democracy. Again, it’s worth keeping it in perspective. The world is less democratic than it was at the turn of the 21st century, but it is still far more democratic than it had been in my lifetime. In the 1970s, when I was a student, the world only had about 33 democracies. Big swaths of the world, like Eastern Europe, Latin America, East Asia, were under the control of totalitarian or military dictatorships, which remain democratic today. If we drill down to rights of particular groups, we see that women’s empowerment, their economic and political power, has come down a little bit compared to 10 years ago, but still close to all-time highs. And for LGBTQ rights, we’re seeing pretty steady progress with some minor backtracks in decriminalization of homosexuality, and more gradually and more recently, in gay marriage, the ability of gay couples to adopt children and other legal forms of equality. Violent crime. Again, I’m going to take a long view, this time a really long view, take you back to the Middle Ages, in which the homicide rate in Europe on this logarithmic scale used to be about 35 per 100,000 per year. That came down by the 20th century to something closer to 2 per 100,000 per year. It came down by a factor of 10. If we zoom in on the most recent decades, and this time we have data for the entire world, we see that the world has continued to reduce the toll of violent crime, in this case, homicide. Knowledge. We all are born illiterate and ignorant. Again, taking the long view, 200 years ago, no more than 15% of humanity could read and write. Today, it is, I’m sorry, closer to 80%, even higher for younger cohorts. That’s also true of basic education, that is elementary school and some years of high school. What good does it do if it doesn’t make us happier? Well, there’s reason to suspect that the world has gotten happier, even though we don’t have happiness data going back very far, because we do know that wealthier countries have people who are more satisfied with their lives than poorer countries, and within countries, wealthier people are more satisfied with their lives. Since, as I’ve shown, the world has gotten richer, one would expect that it’s gotten happier. And for countries where we do have data at two or more points, going back to the 1980s, A majority of them, as they have become richer, they have also become happier. If we – not all, but most. If we zoom in on the 21st century, then we see that for people, both young people under 24 and people over 25, the overall trend is a very slight increase in happiness averaged over nations. So to – oh, I’m sorry, we also read about an epidemic of suicide, and it is true that in some countries, in some demographic sectors, like younger people in the United States and middle-aged men, the suicide rate has increased over the last couple of decades. But if we zoom out and take the global view, we see that it’s quite the opposite, that in fact there has been a massive reduction in the rate of suicide globally over the last 40 years or so. So to sum up, of the 14 trends that I have plotted, for 10 of them, progress has continued and the world is in a better state than it ever has been. These would include life, health, prosperity, poverty, gay rights, homicide, literacy, education, happiness, and suicide. Another four trends, there has been some backtracking, women’s rights we’ve gone back to about 2010, in undernourishment in the poorest parts of the world we’ve gone back to the first decade of the 21st century, about 2005, democracy we’ve gone back to 2000, peace we’ve gone back to around 1990. How many trends have been absolutely reversed or erased, that is, is history cyclical so that any advance will inevitably followed by a decline? The answer is no, that has happened for zero trends. For all of these, we’re better off now than we were in the 20th century. So let me conclude now with some reflections on the nature of progress. Why is progress so hard? Why is there always one step back for every few steps forward? Why are there often recessions? In a way it’s the wrong question because there’s no reason to expect things to go well at all. The universe has no benevolent interest in our well-being and there are many forces in nature that just kind of naturally grind us down. There’s the second law of thermodynamics, there are many more ways in which the world can be in a disordered state than in an ordered state. Evolution is a competitive process where organisms evolve at each other’s expense, particularly pathogens and parasites, which can evolve much faster than we can, as we have been reminded during the COVID pandemic. Human nature has many demons, including greed, dominance, revenge, sadism, superstitious thinking, cognitive fallacies and biases, and there are inherent trade-offs in any policy that we adopt. If you give people greater opportunities, then some people will take greater advantage of them than others and you get more inequality. If you give people more freedom, that includes the freedom to screw up their lives. Then how could progress have happened at all? That sounds rather depressing. Well, in a nutshell, it’s because our species does have the power to use knowledge to improve human well-being. Knowledge is made possible by the fact that together with our inner demons, we have the better angels of our nature, creative cognitive processes that can explore an unlimited space of ideas by recombining simple ideas with a potential for exponential growth of ideas. And we’re equipped with an instinct for language that allows us to share the fruits of our cognition to pool our hard-won discoveries. We have augmented these powers of cognition and language through institutions that can compensate for our cognitive biases by pooling good ideas and weeding out bad ones. Institutions like science, scholarly societies, responsible journalism, record-keeping agencies, and even meetings like the World Economic Forum. The other set of our better angels include our capacity for sympathy, for having a benevolent concern for the well-being of others. Now, by default, our circle of sympathy is rather small. We tend to care innately about our blood relatives, our friends and our allies, cute little furry baby animals, and that’s about it. But the circle of sympathy can be expanded by the forces of cosmopolitanism, by education, by journalism, by art, by mobility, even by reason, the realization that I can’t privilege my interests over others just because I’m me and they’re not. Here again, we’ve developed institutions that try to magnify our circle of sympathy and apply them more widely, institutions like social democracy, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, philanthropies, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals, which despite all of the divisions in the, across the planet, were adopted by 193 out of 193 member states of the United Nations with a commitment to try to improve the state of humanity. I’ll sum up the capacity that we have to make progress with two quotes, one of them from the physicist David Deutsch, everything that is not forbidden by laws of nature is achievable given the right knowledge. And a statement from the otherwise rather pessimistic historian Arnold Toynbee, chronicler of civilizations, who said, the 20th century will be chiefly remembered in future centuries, not as an age of political conflicts or technical inventions, but as an age in which human society dared to think of the welfare of the whole human race as a practical objective. Let’s hope that that can be said of the 21st century as well. Thank you. Thank you. And we have some time for questions and there will be a microphone that will find the person with the raised hand, starting with Paula Escobar Chavez.
Audience: Thank you so much. It was a wonderful conference. So the institution that, you know, help human beings have sympathy for more people and to get away from the trap of egocentrism or individualism are most of them in crisis. Social democracy in the world, 2030 agenda of United Nations is part of an ideological dispute right now, and philanthropy, well, is at least in my region is facing a lot of problems to deliver to the people that need them. So what do you think about that? What is a smart way of not getting into a pessimistic mood with the reality of this institution in crisis? Thank you.
Steven Pinker: Yes, no, they are, and that is a valid concern that gives me anxiety that the institutions that have made us better off are being demonized and discredited. There is a, and so we should try to push back and, well, first they have to earn trust, but then we should vest them with that trust. There is a kind of resilience. So when it comes to social democracy, and by that I don’t mean necessarily liberal democracy, civil rights and elections, but just. Basically, redistribution to help the worst off, the poor, the sick, the elderly, children. Even in countries like the United States, which have a very strong anti-redistributionist libertarian ethos, there seems to be a process where, despite that, governments become more magnanimous. Even in the administration of George W. Bush, there was an expansion of prescription drugs. In the Obama administration, there was Obamacare, which withstood attempts to dismantle it. So there is a process where, as countries get richer, they redistribute more, they get more generous. Not always and everywhere, and there are ideological pushback, but it does kind of tend to happen. So I suspect that the welfare state is not going away, and in fact, as countries get richer, they tend to expand their welfare state. Organizations of international cooperation, as we know, are also under threat. On the other hand, it was no one has withdrawn from the United Nations, and 193 out of 193 nations signed onto it. And there is, again, despite a lot of opposition, such as Brexit, at the same time, there’s another force that is pushing toward institutions of international cooperation. The inescapable fact that many of humanity’s problems are inherently global, and no society can solve them on their own, they kind of have to join forces with others to fight things like international terrorism, climate change, piracy, pandemics, AI, and so on. Now, it doesn’t mean that countries will be wise enough to recognize that these problems are global, but the problems are going to be global no matter what. And so there’s going to be, reality is going to push back and say, you kind of can’t abandon these things altogether. If you do, things get worse, and you’ll be, they’ll become more attractive. But they can get worse in the meantime. Yes?
Audience: What do you think are the most significant factors that are impacting this backtrend in women’s rights? That’s one of the ones that you…
Steven Pinker: Yes, hard to see. That’s an index from VDEM, the Norwegian organization that aggregates a lot of things. I think the Dobbs decision in the United States that returned abortion to the states made an impact. When you break that down country by country, the United States had a backtracking. I don’t know what the other, I think, so that was a major thing just because it was so prominent. And the other things are probably a lot of little things in a lot of different countries because it is a global aggregate. But by and large, things like education of women is relentlessly increasing, representation of women in parliaments and national assemblies, women in positions of corporate power and institutional leadership. There, there’s a pretty relentless wave. We don’t know how long it’ll continue, whether there’ll be more backtracks, but that’s the background state. Yes, where’s the microphone? Over here.
Audience: Hi. So how do you think we could change the news cycle, really? Because I mean, we’re all upset about it in a way. Yes. It’s negative, negative. Meanwhile, when one reads your books, listens to your lecture and others, the world is becoming a better place, but it’s so difficult to make that statement even right now with all the wars going on. What is wrong with our news and how can we change this?
Steven Pinker: Two things. One of them is to have, I think the culture of journalism should acknowledge that this is a problem, both because of the nature of news and because of actual stated biases among journalism. And I’ve heard journalists say this, I’m not being paranoid, that editors have said, well, our background attitude is bad news is serious journalism, good news is advertising or government propaganda. Now, it’s good to have that skepticism. I don’t begrudge them that skepticism. Bad things do happen. It’s important we know about them. But at the same time, there is the danger that both the inherent bias in news and the conscious bias can lead people to become fatalistic, cynical, destructive of institutions that actually have made things better, even though problems remain. Problems are inevitable. There will always be problems. So certainly a recalibration that not everything that goes wrong shows the failure of institutions to appreciate how far we’ve come, a bit more of a historical consciousness. If there is a war, a pandemic, a terrorist attack, just how frequent are they compared to how they were in the past? And a little more data journalism. That is, instead of something bad happens, you have the vox pop interview of the person who’s been affected. People naturally come away thinking, oh, I hear about it more than ever. It must be happening more than ever. Put it into perspective. It’s not so terrible to show the homicide graph or the war death graph, which won’t always tell a positive story. Sometimes things do get worse. But even when they do get worse, the graph puts it into perspective how much worse. So I’d like to see more data in journalism and more just awareness of the inherent negative bias so there can be some compensation. There are news sites like Fix the News and Positive News and Reasons to be Cheerful that try to compensate by picking stories of things that have improved. And these aren’t, crucially, the first reaction of journalists is, oh, yeah, sure, well, we always like feel-good stories like puppy befriends orangutan or cop buys groceries for single mom. But no, it’s not that. These are cases of species that were endangered that have been taken off the endangered species list of advances in solar power, in conservation areas, in countries that have decriminalized homosexuality or expanded women’s rights, diseases that have been eradicated, real stories that affect people by the millions or tens of millions that you just don’t read about. And we really should read about them, too. And it is, I’m seeing our host gesturing at the back, reminding me that the time has come to an end. So thank you for your attention.
Steven Pinker
Speech speed
140 words per minute
Speech length
4228 words
Speech time
1802 seconds
Progress in human flourishing
Explanation
Steven Pinker argues that there has been significant progress in various aspects of human flourishing over time. He defines human flourishing as improvements in life, health, sustenance, prosperity, peace, freedom, safety, knowledge, and happiness.
Evidence
Pinker presents data showing increases in life expectancy, reductions in poverty rates, declines in violence and war, and improvements in education and literacy rates worldwide.
Major Discussion Point
Major Discussion Point 1: Progress in human flourishing
Agreed with
Agreed on
Progress in human flourishing
Differed with
– Audience
Differed on
Perception of current state of progress
Factors enabling human progress
Explanation
Pinker discusses the factors that have enabled human progress despite various challenges. He emphasizes the role of human cognitive abilities, institutions, and an expanding circle of sympathy.
Evidence
He mentions institutions like science and democracy that help overcome cognitive biases, and the development of a capacity for sympathy that allows concern for wider humanity.
Major Discussion Point
Major Discussion Point 3: Factors enabling human progress
Agreed with
– Audience
Agreed on
Challenges to continued progress
Differed with
– Audience
Differed on
Challenges to institutions supporting progress
Ways to maintain progress
Explanation
Pinker suggests ways to maintain and continue human progress. He emphasizes the importance of supporting institutions that have improved human welfare and the necessity of global cooperation.
Evidence
He points out that global problems like climate change and pandemics require international cooperation. He also suggests that news media should provide more historical context and data to balance negative bias.
Major Discussion Point
Major Discussion Point 4: Ways to maintain progress
Audience
Speech speed
139 words per minute
Speech length
210 words
Speech time
90 seconds
Challenges to continued progress
Explanation
Audience members raise concerns about challenges to continued progress. These include crises in democratic institutions, backsliding on women’s rights, and negative bias in news media.
Evidence
An audience member mentions that social democracy, the UN 2030 agenda, and philanthropy are facing problems in delivering benefits to people in need. Another audience member points out recent backtracking in women’s rights.
Major Discussion Point
Major Discussion Point 2: Challenges to continued progress
Agreed with
– Steven Pinker
Agreed on
Challenges to continued progress
Differed with
– Steven Pinker
Differed on
Perception of current state of progress
Agreements
Agreement Points
Progress in human flourishing
speakers
– Steven Pinker
arguments
Progress in human flourishing
summary
Steven Pinker argues that there has been significant progress in various aspects of human flourishing over time, including improvements in life expectancy, health, poverty reduction, peace, and education.
Challenges to continued progress
speakers
– Steven Pinker
– Audience
arguments
Challenges to continued progress
Factors enabling human progress
summary
Both Pinker and audience members acknowledge that there are challenges to continued progress, including crises in democratic institutions and backsliding on certain rights. However, Pinker argues that there are factors and institutions that can help overcome these challenges.
Similar Viewpoints
Both Pinker and audience members recognize the importance of supporting institutions that have improved human welfare and the need for global cooperation to address current challenges.
speakers
– Steven Pinker
– Audience
arguments
Ways to maintain progress
Challenges to continued progress
Unexpected Consensus
Need for improved news reporting
speakers
– Steven Pinker
– Audience
arguments
Ways to maintain progress
explanation
Both Pinker and an audience member agree on the need to change the news cycle to provide a more balanced perspective on global progress, which is somewhat unexpected given the general focus on progress metrics rather than media practices.
Overall Assessment
Summary
The main areas of agreement revolve around the recognition of long-term human progress, the existence of current challenges to this progress, and the need for supporting institutions and global cooperation to maintain and further advance human flourishing.
Consensus level
There is a moderate level of consensus between Pinker and the audience. While they agree on the overall trajectory of human progress, there is also shared concern about current challenges and the need for continued effort to maintain progress. This consensus implies a cautiously optimistic outlook on human development, tempered by an awareness of ongoing obstacles and the need for active engagement to address them.
Differences
Different Viewpoints
Challenges to institutions supporting progress
speakers
– Steven Pinker
– Audience
arguments
Factors enabling human progress
Challenges to continued progress
summary
While Pinker emphasizes the role of institutions in enabling progress, an audience member points out that many of these institutions are currently in crisis, potentially hindering continued progress.
Perception of current state of progress
speakers
– Steven Pinker
– Audience
arguments
Progress in human flourishing
Challenges to continued progress
summary
Pinker presents data showing overall progress in human flourishing, while audience members express concern about recent backsliding in areas like women’s rights and democratic institutions.
Unexpected Differences
Overall Assessment
summary
The main areas of disagreement revolve around the current state and resilience of institutions supporting progress, and the perception of recent trends in human flourishing.
difference_level
The level of disagreement appears to be moderate. While there is general agreement on the importance of progress and the institutions supporting it, there are differing perspectives on recent trends and the resilience of these institutions. These differences highlight the complexity of assessing global progress and the challenges in maintaining positive trends.
Partial Agreements
Partial Agreements
Both Pinker and the audience recognize the importance of institutions in maintaining progress. However, while Pinker focuses on the resilience of these institutions, the audience expresses concern about their current state of crisis.
speakers
– Steven Pinker
– Audience
arguments
Ways to maintain progress
Challenges to continued progress
Similar Viewpoints
Both Pinker and audience members recognize the importance of supporting institutions that have improved human welfare and the need for global cooperation to address current challenges.
speakers
– Steven Pinker
– Audience
arguments
Ways to maintain progress
Challenges to continued progress
Takeaways
Key Takeaways
Overall human progress has continued in many areas like life expectancy, poverty reduction, education, and safety, despite some recent setbacks
Progress is not inevitable and requires continued effort to maintain and expand institutions that enable human flourishing
News media tends to focus on negative events, which can obscure long-term positive trends in human welfare
Global cooperation is increasingly necessary to address major challenges facing humanity
Resolutions and Action Items
News media should provide more historical context and data to balance negative bias
Support and maintain trust in institutions that have contributed to human progress
Unresolved Issues
How to address recent backsliding in women’s rights globally
How to maintain democratic institutions and social welfare programs in the face of ideological opposition
How to effectively reform news media to provide a more balanced perspective on human progress
Suggested Compromises
None identified
Thought Provoking Comments
News is what happens suddenly, not what happens gradually. If 100,000 people escaped from extreme poverty yesterday, and the day before, and the day before that, that’s not news.
speaker
Steven Pinker
reason
This insight highlights a fundamental bias in how news is reported, explaining why progress often goes unnoticed.
impact
This comment set the stage for Pinker’s broader argument about why people tend to have an overly pessimistic view of the world despite data showing long-term progress in many areas.
Everything that is not forbidden by laws of nature is achievable given the right knowledge.
speaker
Steven Pinker (quoting David Deutsch)
reason
This quote encapsulates an optimistic view of human potential and the power of knowledge to drive progress.
impact
It provided a philosophical foundation for Pinker’s argument about humanity’s capacity to solve problems and improve the human condition over time.
The institution that, you know, help human beings have sympathy for more people and to get away from the trap of egocentrism or individualism are most of them in crisis.
speaker
Audience member (Paula Escobar Chavez)
reason
This comment challenged Pinker’s optimistic narrative by pointing out current threats to institutions that have historically driven progress.
impact
It shifted the discussion to address concerns about the sustainability of progress and the resilience of key institutions, prompting Pinker to acknowledge these challenges while maintaining his overall optimistic stance.
What do you think are the most significant factors that are impacting this backtrend in women’s rights?
speaker
Audience member
reason
This question highlighted a specific area where progress has recently reversed, prompting a more nuanced discussion of the complexities of social progress.
impact
It led Pinker to acknowledge areas where progress is not uniform or consistent, adding depth to the conversation about the nature of long-term trends versus short-term fluctuations.
How do you think we could change the news cycle, really?
speaker
Audience member
reason
This question addressed a practical implication of Pinker’s argument about the bias in news reporting.
impact
It prompted a discussion about potential solutions to the negative bias in news reporting, including suggestions for more data-driven and historically contextualized journalism.
Overall Assessment
These key comments shaped the discussion by challenging Pinker’s optimistic narrative with practical concerns, prompting him to address the complexities and challenges of sustaining progress. They also led to a more nuanced exploration of how progress is measured and reported, and the role of institutions and media in shaping public perception of global trends. The discussion moved from a broad overview of positive trends to a more critical examination of the obstacles to continued progress and potential solutions to these challenges.
Follow-up Questions
How can we strengthen and support institutions that promote human sympathy and cooperation, given that many are currently facing crises?
speaker
Paula Escobar Chavez
explanation
This is important because these institutions play a crucial role in expanding human sympathy and addressing global challenges, but their effectiveness is currently threatened.
What are the most significant factors impacting the backtrend in women’s rights?
speaker
Audience member
explanation
Understanding these factors is crucial for addressing the recent decline in women’s empowerment and rights, which goes against the overall trend of progress in other areas.
How can we change the news cycle to better reflect long-term progress while still reporting on current issues?
speaker
Audience member
explanation
This is important because the current negative bias in news reporting may contribute to pessimism and cynicism, potentially undermining support for institutions that have contributed to progress.
What are the specific causes of backtracking in areas such as democracy, peace, and undernourishment in certain regions?
speaker
Steven Pinker
explanation
While not explicitly asked, Pinker’s presentation highlighted these areas of concern, and understanding their causes is crucial for addressing these issues and resuming progress.
How can we better measure and track global happiness and life satisfaction over longer periods?
speaker
Steven Pinker
explanation
Pinker noted the limited historical data on happiness, suggesting that improved long-term tracking could provide valuable insights into the relationship between progress and well-being.
Disclaimer: This is not an official session record. DiploAI generates these resources from audiovisual recordings, and they are presented as-is, including potential errors. Due to logistical challenges, such as discrepancies in audio/video or transcripts, names may be misspelled. We strive for accuracy to the best of our ability.