Episode details

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Matthew Sweet explores the idea of a 'polycrisis' of progress across the intertwined spheres of technology, economic expansion, climate and the global political order. In the spheres of technology, industry, economic growth and geopolitics the notion of human progress seems to have gone into reverse. There are widespread fears that new and incomprehensible technologies will turn against us. The industrial revolutions that enabled prosperity and comfort are now fuelling our ecological self-destruction. And just when we need global institutions to help regulate technological tyranny and combat climate disaster, the postwar architecture of the UN, international law and human rights seem increasingly marginalised in a world order that itself seems to be devolving. For centuries, technology and scientific development, economic expansion and global governance were all seen as markers of progress - the Enlightenment’s promise of endless, forward improvement. But across all these fields this narrative now seems to be in crisis. The idea of progress is so hardwired into our culture and psychology, it's not an easy idea to give up. But is the idea of endless progress itself now part of the problem? And progress for whom? It’s a relatively new idea - older periods in human history imagined the passing of time in cyclical or seasonal terms far more attuned to sustainability and the natural world. Given our current age of ‘polycrisis’ - the interconnection of global technology, climate catastrophe and geopolitical disorder - do we need to rethink how to think the future beyond the concept of linear time, endless expansion and progress? Author, historian and broadcaster Matthew Sweet asks what happened to progress - has it stopped? Are we going backwards? How have our ideas about progress themselves changed? With the help of thinkers, historians, writers and activists, Matthew asks if the concept can be re-imagined to give us newfound agency, shared humanity and most of all, hope. In this episode Matthew explores the idea of technological development as the archetypal narrative of human progress - but does the idea of progress always carry with it its own shadow? Contributors in this episode include the philosopher John Gray, cognitive psychologist Steven Pinker, military historian Margaret MacMillan, artist and writer on technology James Bridle, historian David Edgerton, author Adam Greenfield, novelist Joanna Kavenna, science writer and journalist Philip Ball, psychoanalyst Adam Phillips and Google's CTO of Technology and Society, Blaise Aguera y Arcas. Producer: Eliane Glaser and Simon Hollis A Brook Lapping production for BBC Radio 4
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