15-6: Liberal values across time and generations, developed countries, 1980–2005
15-7: Liberal values across time (extrapolated), world’s culture zones, 1960–2006
15-8: Victimization of children, US, 1993–2012
15-9: Child labor, 1850–2012
16-1: Literacy, 1475–2010
16-2: Basic education, 1820–2010
16-3: Years of schooling, 1870–2010
16-4: Female literacy, 1750–2014
16-5: IQ gains, 1909–2013
16-6: Global well-being, 1820–2015
17-1: Work hours, Western Europe and US, 1870–2000
17-2: Retirement, US, 1880–2010
17-3: Utilities, appliances, and housework, US, 1900–2015
17-4: Cost of light, England, 1300–2006
17-5: Spending on necessities, US, 1929–2016
17-6: Leisure time, US, 1965–2015
17-7: Cost of air travel, US, 1979–2015
17-8: International tourism, 1995–2015
18-1: Life satisfaction and income, 2006
18-2: Loneliness, US students, 1978–2011
18-3: Suicide, England, Switzerland, and US, 1860–2014
18-4: Happiness and excitement, US, 1972–2016
19-1: Nuclear weapons, 1945–2015
20-1: Populist support across generations, 2016
PREFACE
The second half of the second decade of the third millennium would not seem to be an auspicious time to publish a book on the historical sweep of progress and its causes. At the time of this writing, my country is led by people with a dark vision of the current moment: “mothers and children trapped in poverty . . . an education system which leaves our young and beautiful students deprived of all knowledge . . . and the crime, and the gangs, and the drugs that have stolen too many lives.” We are in an “outright war” that is “expanding and metastasizing.” The blame for this nightmare may be placed on a “global power structure” that has eroded “the underlying spiritual and moral foundations of Christianity.”1
In the pages that follow, I will show that this bleak assessment of the state of the world is wrong. And not just a little wrong—wrong wrong, flat-earth wrong, couldn’t-
The sociologist Robert Merton identified Communalism as a cardinal scientific virtue, together with Universalism, Disinterestedness, and Organized Skepticism: CUDOS.2 Kudos indeed goes to the many scientists who shared their data in a communal spirit and responded to my queries thoroughly and swiftly. First among these is Max Roser, proprietor of the mind-expanding
My gratitude goes as well to the other data scientists I pestered and to the institutions that collect and maintain their data: Karlyn Bowman, Daniel Cox (PRRI), Tamar Epner (Social Progress Index), Christopher Fariss, Chelsea Follett (