Before I post my larger review of it, George Monbiot’s new book, Heat: How to Stop the Planet from Burning has a poignant line about our sense of progress:
“We have come to believe we can do anything. We can do anything….Progress now depends upon the exercise of fewer opportunities.” [p. 188]
If progress is an ever-improving standard of living, then faster double-decker jets, SUVs [or FU-V's], the mere existence of cruise ships, and 5000 square foot homes are just plain titillating. But if our recent centuries’ industrial progress is destroying our environment, air, biodiversity and climate, we’d be fools to continue on as we are. If our relationship with ecology is going to suffer, we should stop doing things that will impede our survival.
Thus, progress means voluntarily embracing fewer freedoms if those freedoms are killing us. It’s a no-brainer.
As one put it, “progress isn’t always inevitable”:
