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A Short History Of Progress

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A Short History Of ProgressAuthor: Ronald Wright
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Product Details:

   Paperback 224 pages
   Release Date: 28 September 2006
   Publisher: Canongate Books
   ISBN: 1841958301
   Rating:
   Sales Rank: 7236

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Customer Reviews:

  Of "Progress Traps" and inflexible thinking (16 October 2008)
A concise, readable, and punchy description of the manner in which a number of historical societies rendered their way of life obsolete and destroyed themselves by failing to adapt and to think ahead.

He describes as "progress traps" the apparent improvements of technology or culture which are too effective for the survival of the society which deploys them. For example, when hunting societies moved from catching individual animals to wiping out whole herds by driving them over cliffs it gave a short-term bonanza but soon led to the elimination of their food supply.

Particularly powerful is the description of the way the society of Rapa Nui, on what we call Easter Island, destroyed first the local ecology and consequently itself by felling every tree on the island to build the frames to support and move the huge and imposing Moai statues which are the only surviving remnant of their culture. European explorers were to wonder how such giant statues could have been built in such a desolate place: they weren't, it was man who rendered the island a desert in the act of building them.

Perhaps the most depressing part of the book is when Wright quotes some contemporary rulers or critics who actually foresaw the problems which would ultimately bring down their civilisations, but were unable to persuade enough of their fellow rulers or citizens to generate the necessary political will to take effective action. For example, Solon and Pisistratus foresaw the impact which deforestation would have on the ecology and economy of Athens and tried unsuccessfully to halt it, Ovid foresaw some of the problems of Ancient Rome.

We had better pay more heed to some of the warnings of the dangers facing our civilisation than some of their contemporaries did. This book is one such warning.

  Excellent (02 March 2008)
brilliant. enlightening. entertaining.
Page upon page of eminently quotable nuggets of distilled wisdom.
this is a must read

  Really interesting book! (09 October 2006)
This is one of those books that you can't stop reading!

In this book, Ronald Wright gives us an overall view of the history of mankind so far, and the several and repeated mistakes and errors we have been doing ever since... With detailed views on the Easter Island, Sumerians, the Romans and the ancient civilizations of South America, it traces back the history of human civilization and shows us how these civilizations seem to have disappeared simply because they couldn't (or didn't want to) stop exploring the resources they had at hand.

I really recommend this book to anyone trying to understand current sustainability concerns or to understand and reflect a little more about a lot of ancient civilizations that simply vanished from the face of the earth.

 
 


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