The golden quarter

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The golden quarter

Photo courtesy Dick Swanson/U.S. National Archives

Some of our greatest cultural and technological achievements took place between 1945 and 1971. Why has progress stalled?

Michael Hanlon is a science journalist whose work has appeared in The Sunday Times and The Daily Telegraph, among others. His latest book is In the Interests of Safety (2014), co-written with Tracey Brown. He lives in London.

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We live in a golden age of technological, medical, scientific and social progress. Look at our computers! Look at our phones! Twenty years ago, the internet was a creaky machine for geeks. Now we can’t imagine life without it. We are on the verge of medical breakthroughs that would have seemed like magic only half a century ago: cloned organs, stem-cell therapies to repair our very DNA. Even now, life expectancy in some rich countries is improving by five hours a day. A day! Surely immortality, or something very like it, is just around the corner.

The notion that our 21st-century world is one of accelerating advances is so dominant that it seems churlish to challenge it. Almost every week we read about ‘new hopes’ for cancer sufferers, developments in the lab that might lead to new cures, talk of a new era of space tourism and super-jets that can fly round the world in a few hours. Yet a moment’s thought tells us that this vision of unparalleled innovation can’t be right, that many of these breathless reports of progress are in fact mere hype, speculation – even fantasy.

Yet there once was an age when speculation matched reality. It spluttered to a halt more than 40 years ago. Most of what has happened since has been merely incremental improvements upon what came before. That true age of innovation – I’ll call it the Golden Quarter – ran from approximately 1945 to 1971. Just about everything that defines the modern world either came about, or had its seeds sown, during this time. The Pill. Electronics. Computers and the birth of the internet. Nuclear power. Television. Antibiotics. Space travel. Civil rights.

There is more. Feminism. Teenagers. The Green Revolution in agriculture. Decolonisation. Popular music. Mass aviation. The birth of the gay rights movement. Cheap, reliable and safe automobiles. High-speed trains. We put a man on the Moon, sent a probe to Mars, beat smallpox and discovered the double-spiral key of life. The Golden Quarter was a unique period of less than a single human generation, a time when innovation appeared to be running on a mix of dragster fuel and dilithium crystals.

Today, progress is defined almost entirely by consumer-driven, often banal improvements in information technology. The US economist Tyler Cowen, in his essay The Great Stagnation (2011), argues that, in the US at least, a technological plateau has been reached. Sure, our phones are great, but that’s not the same as being able to fly across the Atlantic in eight hours or eliminating smallpox. As the US technologist Peter Thiel once put it: ‘We wanted flying cars, we got 140 characters.’

Economists describe this extraordinary period in terms of increases in wealth. After the Second World War came a quarter-century boom; GDP-per-head in the US and Europe rocketed. New industrial powerhouses arose from the ashes of Japan. Germany experienced its Wirtschaftswunder. Even the Communist world got richer. This growth has been attributed to massive postwar government stimulus plus a happy nexus of low fuel prices, population growth and high Cold War military spending.

But alongside this was that extraordinary burst of human ingenuity and societal change. This is commented upon less often, perhaps because it is so obvious, or maybe it is seen as a simple consequence of the economics. We saw the biggest advances in science and technology: if you were a biologist, physicist or materials scientist, there was no better time to be working. But we also saw a shift in social attitudes every bit as profound. In even the most enlightened societies before 1945, attitudes to race, sexuality and women’s rights were what we would now consider antediluvian. By 1971, those old prejudices were on the back foot. Simply put, the world had changed.

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But surely progress today is real? Well, take a look around. Look up and the airliners you see are basically updated versions of the ones flying in the 1960s – slightly quieter Tristars with better avionics. In 1971, a regular airliner took eight hours to fly from London to New York; it still does. And in 1971, there was one airliner that could do the trip in three hours. Now, Concorde is dead. Our cars are faster, safer and use less fuel than they did in 1971, but there has been no paradigm shift.

And yes, we are living longer, but this has disappointingly little to do with any recent breakthroughs. Since 1970, the US Federal Government has spent more than $100 billion in what President Richard Nixon dubbed the ‘War on Cancer’. Far more has been spent globally, with most wealthy nations boasting well-funded cancer‑research bodies. Despite these billions of investment, this war has been a spectacular failure. In the US, the death rates for all kinds of cancer dropped by only 5 per cent in the period 1950-2005, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. Even if you strip out confounding variables such as age (more people are living long enough to get cancer) and better diagnosis, the blunt fact is that, with most kinds of cancer, your chances in 2014 are not much better than they were in 1974. In many cases, your treatment will be pretty much the same.

After the dizzying breakthroughs of the 20th century, physics seems to have ground to a halt

For the past 20 years, as a science writer, I have covered such extraordinary medical advances as gene therapy, cloned replacement organs, stem-cell therapy, life-extension technologies, the promised spin-offs from genomics and tailored medicine. None of these new treatments is yet routinely available. The paralyzed still cannot walk, the blind still cannot see. The human genome was decoded (one post-Golden Quarter triumph) nearly 15 years ago and we’re still waiting to see the benefits that, at the time, were confidently asserted to be ‘a decade away’. We still have no real idea how to treat chronic addiction or dementia. The recent history of psychiatric medicine is, according to one eminent British psychiatrist I spoke to, ‘the history of ever-better placebos’. And most recent advances in longevity have come about by the simple expedient of getting people to give up smoking, eat better, and take drugs to control blood pressure.

There has been no new Green Revolution. We still drive steel cars powered by burning petroleum spirit or, worse, diesel. There has been no new materials revolution since the Golden Quarter’s advances in plastics, semi-conductors, new alloys and composite materials. After the dizzying breakthroughs of the early- to mid-20th century, physics seems (Higgs boson aside) to have ground to a halt. String Theory is apparently our best hope of reconciling Albert Einstein with the Quantum world, but as yet, no one has any idea if it is even testable. And nobody has been to the Moon for 42 years.

Why has progress stopped? Why, for that matter, did it start when it did, in the dying embers of the Second World War?

One explanation is that the Golden Age was the simple result of economic growth and technological spinoffs from the Second World War. It is certainly true that the war sped the development of several weaponisable technologies and medical advances. The Apollo space programme probably could not have happened when it did without the aerospace engineer Wernher Von Braun and the V-2 ballistic missile. But penicillin, the jet engine and even the nuclear bomb were on the drawing board before the first shots were fired. They would have happened anyway.

Conflict spurs innovation, and the Cold War played its part – we would never have got to the Moon without it. But someone has to pay for everything. The economic boom came to an end in the 1970s with the collapse of the 1944 Bretton Woods trading agreements and the oil shocks. So did the great age of innovation. Case closed, you might say.

And yet, something doesn’t quite fit. The 1970s recession was temporary: we came out of it soon enough. What’s more, in terms of Gross World Product, the world is between two and three times richer now than it was then. There is more than enough money for a new Apollo, a new Concorde and a new Green Revolution. So if rapid economic growth drove innovation in the 1950s and ’60s, why has it not done so since?

In The Great Stagnation, Cowen argues that progress ground to a halt because the ‘low-hanging fruit’ had been plucked off. These fruits include the cultivation of unused land, mass education, and the capitalisation by technologists of the scientific breakthroughs made in the 19th century. It is possible that the advances we saw in the period 1945-1970 were similarly quick wins, and that further progress is much harder. Going from the prop-airliners of the 1930s to the jets of the 1960s was, perhaps, just easier than going from today’s aircraft to something much better.

But history suggests that this explanation is fanciful. During periods of technological and scientific expansion, it has often seemed that a plateau has been reached, only for a new discovery to shatter old paradigms completely. The most famous example was when, in 1900, Lord Kelvin declared physics to be more or less over, just a few years before Einstein proved him comprehensively wrong. As late as the turn of the 20th century, it was still unclear how powered, heavier-than-air aircraft would develop, with several competing theories left floundering in the wake of the Wright brothers’ triumph (which no one saw coming).

Lack of money, then, is not the reason that innovation has stalled. What we do with our money might be, however. Capitalism was once the great engine of progress. It was capitalism in the 18th and 19th centuries that built roads and railways, steam engines and telegraphs (another golden era). Capital drove the industrial revolution.

Now, wealth is concentrated in the hands of a tiny elite. A report by Credit Suisse this October found that the richest 1 per cent of humans own half the world’s assets. That has consequences. Firstly, there is a lot more for the hyper-rich to spend their money on today than there was in the golden age of philanthropy in the 19th century. The superyachts, fast cars, private jets and other gewgaws of Planet Rich simply did not exist when people such as Andrew Carnegie walked the earth and, though they are no doubt nice to have, these fripperies don’t much advance the frontiers of knowledge. Furthermore, as the French economist Thomas Piketty pointed out in Capital (2014), money now begets money more than at any time in recent history. When wealth accumulates so spectacularly by doing nothing, there is less impetus to invest in genuine innovation.

the new ideal is to render your own products obsolete as fast as possible

During the Golden Quarter, inequality in the world’s economic powerhouses was, remarkably, declining. In the UK, that trend levelled off a few years later, to reach a historic low point in 1977. Is it possible that there could be some relationship between equality and innovation? Here’s a sketch of how that might work.

As success comes to be defined by the amount of money one can generate in the very short term, progress is in turn defined not by making things better, but by rendering them obsolete as rapidly as possible so that the next iteration of phones, cars or operating systems can be sold to a willing market.

In particular, when share prices are almost entirely dependent on growth (as opposed to market share or profit), built-in obsolescence becomes an important driver of ‘innovation’. Half a century ago, makers of telephones, TVs and cars prospered by building products that their buyers knew (or at least believed) would last for many years. No one sells a smartphone on that basis today; the new ideal is to render your own products obsolete as fast as possible. Thus the purpose of the iPhone 6 is not to be better than the iPhone 5, but to make aspirational people buy a new iPhone (and feel better for doing so). In a very unequal society, aspiration becomes a powerful force. This is new, and the paradoxical result is that true innovation, as opposed to its marketing proxy, is stymied. In the 1960s, venture capital was willing to take risks, particularly in the emerging electronic technologies. Now it is more conservative, funding start-ups that offer incremental improvements on what has gone before.

But there is more to it than inequality and the failure of capital.

During the Golden Quarter, we saw a boom in public spending on research and innovation. The taxpayers of Europe, the US and elsewhere replaced the great 19th‑century venture capitalists. And so we find that nearly all the advances of this period came either from tax-funded universities or from popular movements. The first electronic computers came not from the labs of IBM but from the universities of Manchester and Pennsylvania. (Even the 19th-century analytical engine of Charles Babbage was directly funded by the British government.) The early internet came out of the University of California, not Bell or Xerox. Later on, the world wide web arose not from Apple or Microsoft but from CERN, a wholly public institution. In short, the great advances in medicine, materials, aviation and spaceflight were nearly all pump-primed by public investment. But since the 1970s, an assumption has been made that the private sector is the best place to innovate.

The story of the past four decades might seem to cast doubt on that belief. And yet we cannot pin the stagnation of ingenuity on a decline in public funding. Tax spending on research and development has, in general, increased in real and relative terms in most industrialised nations even since the end of the Golden Quarter. There must be another reason why this increased investment is not paying more dividends.

Could it be that the missing part of the jigsaw is our attitude towards risk? Nothing ventured, nothing gained, as the saying goes. Many of the achievements of the Golden Quarter just wouldn’t be attempted now. The assault on smallpox, spearheaded by a worldwide vaccination campaign, probably killed several thousand people, though it saved tens of millions more. In the 1960s, new medicines were rushed to market. Not all of them worked and a few (thalidomide) had disastrous consequences. But the overall result was a medical boom that brought huge benefits to millions. Today, this is impossible.

The time for a new drug candidate to gain approval in the US rose from less than eight years in the 1960s to nearly 13 years by the 1990s. Many promising new treatments now take 20 years or more to reach the market. In 2011, several medical charities and research institutes in the UK accused EU-driven clinical regulations of ‘stifling medical advances’. It would not be an exaggeration to say that people are dying in the cause of making medicine safer.

Risk-aversion has become a potent weapon in the war against progress on other fronts. In 1992, the Swiss genetic engineer Ingo Potrykus developed a variety of rice in which the grain, rather than the leaves, contain a large concentration of Vitamin A. Deficiency in this vitamin causes blindness and death among hundreds of thousands every year in the developing world. And yet, thanks to a well-funded fear-mongering campaign by anti-GM fundamentalists, the world has not seen the benefits of this invention.

Apollo couldn’t happen today, not because we don’t want to go to the Moon, but because the risk would be unacceptable

In the energy sector, civilian nuclear technology was hobbled by a series of mega-profile ‘disasters’, including Three Mile Island (which killed no one) and Chernobyl (which killed only dozens). These incidents caused a global hiatus into research that could, by now, have given us safe, cheap and low-carbon energy. The climate change crisis, which might kill millions, is one of the prices we are paying for 40 years of risk-aversion.

Apollo almost certainly couldn’t happen today. That’s not because people aren’t interested in going to the Moon any more, but because the risk – calculated at a couple-of-per-cent chance of astronauts dying – would be unacceptable. Boeing took a huge risk when it developed the 747, an extraordinary 1960s machine that went from drawing board to flight in under five years. Its modern equivalent, the Airbus A380 (only slightly larger and slightly slower), first flew in 2005 – 15 years after the project go-ahead. Scientists and technologists were generally celebrated 50 years ago, when people remembered what the world was like before penicillin, vaccination, modern dentistry, affordable cars and TV. Now, we are distrustful and suspicious – we have forgotten just how dreadful the world was pre-Golden Quarter.

we could be in a world where Alzheimer’s was treatable, clean nuclear power had ended the threat of climate change, and cancer was on the back foot

Risk played its part, too, in the massive postwar shift in social attitudes. People, often the young, were prepared to take huge, physical risks to right the wrongs of the pre-war world. The early civil rights and anti-war protestors faced tear gas or worse. In the 1960s, feminists faced social ridicule, media approbation and violent hostility. Now, mirroring the incremental changes seen in technology, social progress all too often finds itself down the blind alleyways of political correctness. Student bodies used to be hotbeds of dissent, even revolution; today’s hyper-conformist youth is more interested in the policing of language and stifling debate when it counters the prevailing wisdom. Forty years ago a burgeoning media allowed dissent to flower. Today’s very different social media seems, despite democratic appearances, to be enforcing a climate of timidity and encouraging groupthink.

Does any of this really matter? So what if the white heat of technological progress is cooling off a bit? The world is, in general, far safer, healthier, wealthier and nicer than it has ever been. The recent past was grim; the distant past disgusting. As Steven Pinker and others have argued, levels of violence in most human societies had been declining since well before the Golden Quarter and have continued to decline since.

We are living longer. Civil rights have become so entrenched that gay marriage is being legalised across the world and any old-style racist thinking is met with widespread revulsion. The world is better in 2014 than it was in 1971.

And yes, we have seen some impressive technological advances. The modern internet is a wonder, more impressive in many ways than Apollo. We might have lost Concorde but you can fly across the Atlantic for a couple of days’ wages – remarkable. Sci-fi visions of the future often had improbable spacecraft and flying cars but, even in Blade Runner’s Los Angeles of 2019, Rick Deckard had to use a payphone to call Rachael.

But it could have been so much better. If the pace of change had continued, we could be living in a world where Alzheimer’s was treatable, where clean nuclear power had ended the threat of climate change, where the brilliance of genetics was used to bring the benefits of cheap and healthy food to the bottom billion, and where cancer really was on the back foot. Forget colonies on the Moon; if the Golden Quarter had become the Golden Century, the battery in your magic smartphone might even last more than a day.

Read more essays on future of technology, history of science, history of technology and progress & modernity

Comments

  • Tychy

    I think that this essay gets a difficult balance right between not taking progress for granted and asking why it appears to be deccelerating. Maybe it was written before news came out of Daniel Fidyka's treatment, but the line that "the paralysed still cannot walk" is now, happily, out of date.

    If there is a crisis in R&D, it is as much moral as a passing trend in capitalism. Over the last fifty years, the idea that human beings can change the world has come under remorseless attack. We are seen as a sort of vermin, who are mindlessly using up the planet's resources and polluting its precious atmosphere. In the UK every project - from building a few houses to digging a shale gas well - is greeted with a gigantic, disproportionate disapproval. Commissioning a nuclear power station is now viewed as being as dire as starting a war.

    So we need not just more risk-taking, but a deeper, richer Humanism,

    • Michael Hanlon

      Thank you Tychy. I had thought about incorporating the news about the spinal cord repair, but this is extremely early days and needs to be replicated and I think my comment stands (hopefully not for long).
      It is unclear what percentage of paralysed people alive now will benefit from this technique; my suspicion is that it will be at least a decade before we see it routinely offered. But it is a big ray of light I agree.
      You are bang on the money about the atmosphere of disapproval. It really is depressing.

      • Tychy

        You're right - I've jumped the shark a bit - his treatment is hardly "routinely available."

      • chris

        Agreed, MIchael - I was a researcher in this field in the mid-80s and we kept hearing about revolutionary walking by paralysed people (in those days by electrical stimulation). It was all hyperbole, and as you noted in your article, we get a lot of that these days (e.g. the human genome decyphering etc.). I'd love to see a website where they track these "cure" claims and see what happened to them 10 years later!

      • Jay S

        Keep in mind that much of the delay in medical sciences is due to government imposed regulations that inhibit trials. The government breaks the private sector's legs and then everybody bashes the private sector and claims "only public investment yields great new breakthroughs".

        • Thinking_Ape

          Half right, but the cautious regulatory system exists because we're more cautious as people. The author is right that if thalidomide happened today, it would be unacceptable. We, as a society, not just as a government, don't tolerate those kinds of risks anymore.

          • Jay S

            First off, the government isn't "society". They are quite distinct. Second, the FDA actually causes more deaths by its cautiousness than it prevents: http://www.fdareview.org/harm.shtml

          • Thinking_Ape

            I don't doubt that FDA caution has its costs. But think of Vioxx for a moment. It was approved by even our cautious FDA and was used only between 1999 and 2003, but it's estimated that it caused 30,000 deaths.

            That kind of thing is morally outrageous to people today--it's seen as fat cat pharma profiting from poison.

          • http://energyknot.blogspot.co.uk/ WilliamAshbless

            The Windscale fire of 1957 was 'estimated' to have caused 240 deaths. Every death extrapolated from a model. Today that model is in dispute and zero is a closer estimation of the Windscale fire fatalities.

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            Causes, or accepts?

      • oneproudbrowncoat .

        I suspect that part of the disapproval (at least, what little there may be in regards to medical advances) is due to economics. At one time, the investment in a medical advance could lessen over a period in proportion to the depth of benefit- think of things like polio- whereas now, since the problems to solve are larger, the cost (as well as the length of time compared to the spread of the advance) is greater. It took less time to see earlier medical advances go from the privilege of the few to being common practice than it will with the discoveries of today. I can use myself as an example: if none in my household are likely to be able to afford a major transplant or a treatment to reverse an illness as serious as Alzheimer's, then there's no reason to support it.

    • jdgalt

      Nuclear power is a great example of how overregulation is the real problem.

      The rightful "precautionary principle" (with apologies to David Hume) would be, "Extraordinary demands on other people require extraordinary proof."

      • http://energyknot.blogspot.co.uk/ WilliamAshbless

        The foundation for the over-regulation afflicting nuclear fission dates from "theory" enacted in 1956. It only began to hurt fission R&D in the 1970s with the creation of the NRC and defunding of fission R&D in the States. All well before Three Mile Island. That tells me that 3MI was and event Western society had been waiting for almost as seers once waited for comets to interpret our present and future.

    • http://texrat.net/ texrat

      "We are seen as a sort of vermin, who are mindlessly using up the planet's resources and polluting its precious atmosphere"

      The shoe seems to fit.

    • Shirley0401

      I agree that it's important for people to have faith in their ability to change the world for the better. At the same time, though, we (as a species) are having an ever-greater impact on the natural systems that support us and every other species on the planet.
      I mean, we ARE "mindlessly using up the planet's resources and polluting its precious atmosphere." Aren't we? And we COULD back off our current level of consumption, if we started to make some really hard decisions, the benefits of which would accrue well beyond the next quarterly report or software update (and would also be necessarily difficult to measure, as there would be no control planet to offer contrast).
      The techno-optimism of those who are convinced that of COURSE we'll innovate our way out of climate change strikes me as almost religious in its resistance to arguments against the faith. I'm sure there were plenty of Romans making similar claims up until the day their "eternal city" fell to the Visigoths...

      • Tychy

        Rome's still here...

        • oneproudbrowncoat .

          "Rome's still here..."

          Indeed? On the streets of that city, would you mind asking 'Quid nunc de senatu, quae Caesaris sunt omnia?' of the first hundred people you meet, and list their responses? Thanking you in advance.

          • Tychy

            Sure, if you'll pay for the flight and hotel. I'll also need a translator.

  • http://yesrousselot.wordpress.com/ Yann R.

    The planned obsolescence argument was one of the most poignant, to me. Speaks volumes about our paradigm shift from making high quality objects to making a profit (whatever the cost). Great article, a breeze to read and full of wisdom.

    • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

      The reason phones lasted forever and didn't change was that the technology was stagnant due to AT&T's absolute monopoly on telecoms. (They even fought tooth and nail against innovations like answering machines and speakerphones, trying to get them ruled illegal.)

      These days I'm sure some people buy a new iPhone or Galaxy because they want to be seen as having the latest gadget, but a lot more people buy a new phone because it's genuinely better than the previous generation. I still have an iPhone 1 in a closet, and it still worked last time I tried it, but the amount of progress since 2007 is incredible and there's no reason I'd want to use it instead of an iPhone 6.

      (And to say that such progress is "planned obsolescence" is crazy. It assumes people know how to build something better now but don't. In tech industries the competition is intense and everyone is trying to build the best product they can to outdo the others.)

      • chris

        Sometimes we seem to go backwards: I'm still using a Droid Pro+ phone because none of the new ones have a hardware keyboard. I'm sure most people would love one but they just don't make them anymore. I also think computers were easier to use 20 years ago - they've becomes over-complicated and bloated now. I wish I could have my old PowerMac from 1996 back again - every morning I'd come into the office and say "tell me a joke" and it would come up with one. I haven't seen computers (even Apple) do that for a long time!

        • clasqm

          Get an iPhone and ask Siri to tell you a joke. She will.

        • Stephen Cox

          I would kill for a new(er) phone with a hardware keyboard... something the size of a Galaxy Note with a slider would make me stop everything I'm doing and go buy it. Nothing compares to the tactile feedback of typing a message.

          But for now, I'll keep toting my Galaxy Note II. It does everything I need from a smartphone, despite being 2 years old and 2 generations behind.

          • Mastro63

            I do miss the button keyboard of my old Samsung Stratosphere- but the rest of the phone was a dog.

      • http://yesrousselot.wordpress.com/ Yann R.

        It's not just tech. You're forgetting cars, lightbulbs, washing machines, toasters, vacuum cleaners, clothing, shoes, bottled water... Just look at bic pens and lighters: it's a culture of disposable items. Some things should be disposable (medical equipment, for instance) but that list is small. I feel that, in my dad's time, having an object that lasted a lifetime was a symbol of intelligent purchasing. Granted, we have now made things cheaper, accessible, but in the process, filled the oceans with plastic and third world landfills with dead circuitry. I don't think that's very intelligent.

        • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

          All of the disposable things you list come from or predate the "Golden Quarter". The term "planned obsolescence" itself was coined in 1950s critiques of the auto industry.

          If anything, we've gotten better since 1970 — I think we can count ecology and sustainability as ideas that took root after that time. The first Earth Day was in 1970, and "Silent Spring" was earlier, but few people took ecology seriously before the '70s. And it took the oil crises of the mid-'70s to get anyone to consider the limits of petroleum production.

          During the "Golden Quarter" few people seriously thought about the problems of pollution or limited resources. Our cars got crappy mileage and spewed unfiltered exhaust including lead particulates.

          (Also, I have to say — light bulbs? In your dad's era they lasted a lifetime? :) Now, a modern LED lamp: there's something that lasts.)

          • Shirley0401

            I think you both make some good points, but I've heard a *lot* of people complain about how phones seem built to stop working about two years after purchase (coincidentally around the same time one's contract is up for renewal). I, for one, could care less about advances made in the last 2 years. The most recently developed feature on my phone that I have any use for is GPS/directions. But I just had to buy a new phone because nothing was "supported" any longer. I took it into the store, and the Verizon guy told me he couldn't believe I hadn't already "upgraded." He said something to the effect of, "a guy like you can't be seen with a phone like that." A claim that our culture doesn't celebrate the new primarily for the sake of its being new is hard for me to take seriously.
            You mention environmentalism, but to get anywhere close to keeping warming <2 degrees, we're going to have to get away from this culture of disposability, ASAP.

        • Lance Sjogren

          I believe planned obsolescence is a bona fide concern in some areas but as Jens eloquently pointed out it is not very applicable in areas like cell phones that are experiencing rapid technological advance.

      • Lance Sjogren

        Although I largely agree with the "innovation has slowed way down" hypothesis in general, your arguments regarding mobile phones are rock solid.

        • Lance Sjogren

          Indeed, planned obsolescence is a ludicrous argument with regard to products experiencing rapid technological advance (e.g. mobile phones) while it is a legitimate argument regarding products that are experiencing glacially slow technological progress, where new models predominately involve styling updates. (which is largely the situation with automobiles)

          I have read comments in the past expressing nostaligia for the old Heathkit radio kits that you build yourself with a soldering iron. I can kind of understand the nostaligia, but it does ignore the fact that electronics technology has advanced by orders of magnitude. And the environmental impact of a comparable electronic product today is vastly less than that of its counterpart from decades ago. Of course, that doesn't mean the environmental impact of the electronics industry has shrunk by orders of magnitude, because it is not devoted to building just contemporary versions of products that existed decades ago, but rather it is devoted to building products that have massively greater functionality than those that existed in the past.

          Which is a trend I wish would be a little less pronounced. When I look to buy a PC today, everything has far more capability than I need. I wish they would also offer bare bones products that leverage today's technology to provide something dirt cheap. That by the way is something the third world could sure use as well.

          My cell phone which I got free when I enrolled in a prepaid plan has all sorts of tools I never use and are just a nuisance. And it is about the cheapest dumb phone that you can get.

      • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

        There is no doubt that the AT&T phone monopoly slowed telecommunications innovation considerably. Like many such problems, this one resulted from a "devil's bargain" made back in the early 1900s in order to allow the interconnection of local phone systems into a national network. At the time, New York City, for example, had five competing phone companies, and if you were on one system, you couldn't call someone on another system; the same was true for many other cities, and even more so in more suburban and rural areas, where "barbed-wire connectivity" lasted until the 1950 in places.

        Less known is the role that RCA played in suppressing radio and particularly television innovation using its quasi-monopoly powers granted by the early FCC, again to spur creation of national radio networks. They succeeded in keeping the entire UHF band largely offline and inaccessible to most Americans into the 1960s, when the monopoly was finally broken by the CATV firms. Without that, we wouldn't have the proliferation of cable offerings we have today, and those of us with a Real Housewives fixation would be out of luck.

        Monopolies are usually granted for what seem at the time to be good reasons, but have a habit of quickly outliving their benefits.

        • Mastro63

          Cars could be made out of plastic and be much less expensive for working people.

          But- they now have a huge number of safety regulations that basically make large steel cars mandatory (yes- aluminum is slowly catching up).

          Sure - it saves lives- but makes automotive innovation very difficult.

      • Vardan Antonyan

        It is not that technology is getting better with each IPhone version, but overall lowered expectations. New technological advances are like a joke and people are falling to recognize them. Case in question is this the new wave of "Smart" watches that are flooding the markets. I don't think there is anything smart in a watch that requires daily charging. My friend replied to this argument by saying that I charge my phone everyday, I can just charge my smart watch as well. I agree with author on all the points and think that our technological advances are minor. And I know technology since I have been in the bleeding edge of electronics for past 20 years. Technology even got worse then before. Consider Audio technology invented in seventies. With HiFi we reached the level of technology that exceeded our capability our hearing. You would think that once we reached that peak, the technology will become standard. But go to any electronics store and you would see a zoo of all kinds of audio technology that somehow gets away being inferior to seventies technology by keeping quiet about it and selling well. How about the technological joke that US company is buying old Russian rocket engines from sixties, refurbishing it and using to launch satellites. What about non existent advances in medical technology? The only thing that today's Information Technology done is to make us talk lot more and trivialize individual human accomplishments and value. Our technology is lucking direction and long term plan and humanity as whole does not have any new frontier. Only in this stagnated technology one can be amused by release of iPhone 6. At this rate I will consider buying an iPhone when they come up with version 36.

      • http://texrat.net/ texrat

        As the author noted, there's significant effort put forth in protecting the status quo... more so than in disrupting it. Gotta make those quarterly numbers...

      • http://mikaellind.com Mikael Lind

        Apple encourages you to upgrade your OS even when you have an old computer or iPhone, but if you do that, your computer/iPhone becomes sluggish since the new OS is specifically designed for newer models. This is a pretty clear message to the customer that Apple wants the customer to upgrade to a newer computer/iPhone. There are ways around this for people who know how the system works (I used a 2008 MacBook with good result up until now, but I had to resist certain offers from Apple that I knew wouldn't do my computer any good), but to most people, the signal is clear. They upgrade the OS as they are being told to, and then find out that the iPhone they bought only 3 years ago is becoming increasingly slow, and soon, it leaves them with not much choice but to buy a new iPhone. So, in a way, yes, that is planned obsolescence.

        • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

          I actually worked for Apple for a long time (on Mac OS.)

          On Mac OS at least, many OS upgrades run faster on the same hardware than the previous version, due to optimizations. (10.6 was a major example.) Improving performance was always a high priority while I worked there.

          When performance degrades it's not because of any malicious desire to make old devices slower; it's usually because new OS versions add new features, which use more memory. Adding features is basically a good thing (try going back to iOS 1.0 and see how you like it!) and inevitable due to competition against other vendors.

          OS vendors want you to upgrade your OS because it simplifies their job and those of app developers: it's a real pain to have to build an app that works on lots of different OS versions, due to differing feature sets and bug fixes. This is one of the major reasons why iOS has a better app marketplace despite having less overall market share than Android.

          OS vendors are also pretty good about putting out essential updates (esp. security) for older releases, for the benefit of the users that don't upgrade to the latest. (As an extreme example, MS kept supporting 2003's Windows XP until earlier this year.)

          This isn't "planned obsolescence", it's messy side effects of rapid progress. Real planned obsolescence was when car manufacturers stuck tail fins on their cars so that people who had last years model would feel that it was out of date and want to buy a new one to keep up, even though the tail fins had no purpose.

          • http://mikaellind.com Mikael Lind

            Thing is, though, that most people don't even know what they're upgrading to, and except from some new funny apps, not much has changed, really. Most people still use their laptops and iPhones for Facebook, email and making calls, as well as for using some word processors for school work. They grow into believing that their 3 year old machine is "junk" and that they need an upgrade (this is almost what some vendors say to you if you wanted to buy an iPhone 4 one year ago - my girlfriend bought one and it still works fine, for what she uses it for), but there's no real difference in what they do with their machines.

            I compose music on my machine, so I enjoy some extra RAM, but as for the new operative systems, most people tell me to just stick to Snow Leopard instead. I also work in a university building, and I can easily tell that a huge amount of the students are somehow taught to believe that they constantly need to upgrade their machines, but still, when you ask them what they use them for, it's always the same: word processors, dictionaries, Facebook, and stuff that was as good on older machines and operative systems (or pretty much, at least) as they are now.

          • Mastro63

            Spending $600 on a new phone every year is basically nuts- especially for people with low incomes.

            Lets face it- the smart phone is a status symbol. I play the part a bit- I remember being at a meeting where I was embarrassed that my phone was the cheapest of the bunch.

            Now I have a $230 Motorola- I've only received complements on it- and it works fine.

      • oneproudbrowncoat .

        This kind of depends on what we consider progress, or how we define 'better'. For example, my LG Volt is better than my old Samsung Prevail, because the display is larger & more durable with small improvement in battery life. But to improve upon that, the speed and signal strength would have to work underground, the device would have to survive a 10' drop to concrete without damage, with perhaps a couple of other small things as well. I'm unlikely to see that in the next few generations of the technology, so it's not worth upgrading. "Best product" is also misleading; it should read "best product for the lowest cost that people will buy". There are a lot of things that could be produced that just won't see the light of day, simply because the public doesn't appear to want them or won't pay enough for the investment to bear fruit quickly enough.

  • chris

    I used to say this a lot about 20 years ago. I must admit that the advent of the web made it seem that something had finally happened. But Michael is right that this is really illusory, since it depended on technology (the internet) that had been initiated during Eisenhower's administration. There must have been a psychological switch around 1971 - risk is certainly one way of looking at. The combination of the newly emerging power of the middle-east, with its inherent instability and medieval attitudes, seemed to make us insecure about embarking upon big engineering projects. But why didn't that make us develop alternatives to importing vast quantities of oil? It really is a mystery but glad you raised it!

    • Wayne Martin

      "There must have been a psychological switch around 1971.."

      There certainly was, and there certainly is on a regular, generational basis. I've heard these grumblings the whole of my 62 years, and I've come to the following model: from time to time, we don't know what we want.

      Are you sure you want a huge debt of student loans or would you rather go to coding boot camp? Was it inevitable that Bill Gates found Microsoft AND that Microsoft succeed, or was it mostly lucky timing? Can you truly throw your support behind a political candidate that promises you a future that you aren't sure you'd want when it gets here?

      It is uncertainty, IMHO, that drives these kinds of articles. And, these kinds of articles are absolutely necessary.

      We wanted to go to the moon because of the perception that the USSR might get there first and build military bases. We didn't talk about this before Kennedy threw down the challenge, but it was discussed at home and school consistently thereafter. We knew for sure what we wanted and needed to do. Why knew for sure why we had to do this.

      Today, everyone understands, better than in the 60's, marketing hype, propaganda, and conspiracy. We've had a long time of exposure, which has created some measure of immunity to it. Words still carry power, but we've also built up our ability to dismiss them. This means Kennedy would have a much harder time getting us to the moon today because we are harder to convince. And we have more options to think on. The world is more complex. And yet we are basically the same human beings we were before the Industrial Revolution. Fun, eh?

      • Matt

        Could it be that the problem of "we don't know what we want" comes from the current overabundance of choice that Western society has now? We have so many options for every facet of our lives that uncertainty becomes the norm? Modern Western democratic culture prides itself on freedom and choice, but when presented too many options, people can panic. If there are 30 types of breakfast cereal, I'll probably take a lot longer to decide what I want (and second guess myself) than if I were offered only three types. In terms of education, information, and the theory that both enlighten an individual, the Internet may be one of the best/worst things to ever happen. More access to more information means a higher likelihood for both increased understanding AND increased misinformation. Throw in some good ol' human cognitive dissonance and you can find yourself with a culture of paranoia, anxiety, and fear.

        • Wayne Martin

          Perhaps the problem of 30 breakfast cereals isn't really much different than standing alone in the wilderness and choosing where to spend the night. In both cases, you have an abundance of information around you, limited life experience with all of the choices, maybe some genetic predispositions, maybe some family behavior to draw on. Many of your options may be taken away from you as time passes. You won't get to choose among all of them.

          I don't think it follows that too many choices results in anxiety and fear. I think our emotions are more complex than that. Fear occurs on roller coasters. Fear occurs when you step on a snake or hear a dog growl. Fear occurs when you wonder about the well being of someone dear to you. Those fears aren't identical.

          I think our emotions are a way our bodies communicate with us. Emotions have a richer syntax than good or bad. Add to the mix that you can train your body to suppress or enhance the expression of emotions and it really gets fun!

          That said; humans seem to begin with something complicated and difficult to understand, and encapsulate it in a wrapper that makes it appear simple and easy to understand. This is very useful. One description of this is Love. Another description of this is Bigotry. So care is needed when we simplify the complex, and this is also a source of fear; will we get it right.

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            That analogy fails for me. 30 different trees (or camping spots) typically aren't as varied as 30 different cereals (or toothpastes or toilet papers). The safe assumption in your scenario is that a shelter is a shelter is a shelter and your hypothetical refuge-seeker would just pick one without the sort of analysis necessary in selecting a cereal... which tends to mean reading the ingredients list, checking unit cost, etc.

            I agree with the rest of your post. It points to religion, mythology, et al.

    • Lance Sjogren

      In my view it is simply a matter of this: Some technologies that can meet certain human needs are governed by some very favorable laws of physics and others are not.

      Most anything to do with information is governed by very favorable laws of physics. It takes an incredibly small amount of energy to move photons around the world on fiber optics. It takes an incredibly small number of electrons to flow through integrated circuits to process information. Just a couple of examples there, you could find a multitude in the world of information.

      In stark contrast, it takes a lot of energy to move a teddy bear from China to the US on a ship. It takes a lot of fossil fuels or electricity to heat a house. It takes a lot of energy to transport a human being from one city to another.

      I think a good way to delineate it: Those technologies associated with feeding the human mind are subject to very favorable laws of physics.

      Those associated with serving the needs of the human body are subject to very unfavorable laws of physics. One example, the Carnot cycle for heat engines. Heat engines are used all over the place, they run our cars, they heat our houses, they run factory equipment, etc. etc.

      In information technology we have Moore's law, which basically was a statement that the laws of physics allow us to work with information billions of times more efficiently than we were doing and that we could achieve those theorietical advances at a rapid clip.

      In "energy/materials" technology we have laws like the Carnot Cycle that define the maximum efficiency of energy conversion to work you can get out of a heat engine, and there's no Moore's law there, our evolutionary path is that we may be able to squeeze out a couple more percent efficiency over a few evolutionary cycles of improvement and then we eventually hit a brick wall.

  • EmperorFaustus

    This is an excellent article - particularly the discussion about capitalism. Just to play Devils Advocate, though, I wonder if our aversion to risk is justified, somewhat, by the stakes? The potential for a man-made disaster of epic proportions is more real now than at any point in human history. Could our aversion to risk be a natural correction to technology advancing faster than our collective capacity to use it wisely? In a world where germs can be carried from one side of the world to the other in a day, and we already have weapons capable of decimating cities, perhaps there's an argument for further power being withheld? Hiroshima and Nagasaki demonstrated that when we discover a new technology, we are willing to use it. What's the next advancement to that, a world-killer? Detonating that once would end the story.

    I agree with Tychy that we must resurrect the anthropocene (sp). Humnity has a great deal to offer the world, and until we accept that fact, it seems unlikely we'll live up to it.

    • http://texrat.net/ texrat

      good point.

  • Handy Oey

    This

    " When wealth accumulates so spectacularly by doing nothing, there is less impetus to invest in genuine innovation. "

    and this

    " Risk-aversion has become a potent weapon in the war against progress on other fronts."

    struck me deep though I don't see it as

    "calculated at a couple-of-per-cent chance of astronauts dying – "

    because it is not the death percentage that the current world (and wealthy people/banks/investments) is looking at but the risk in profit/ return of investment.

    The world as of right now is in fear of changing the status quo with the current distribution of power and wealth. Innovation is stopped not because it is risky as per death toll but because it can be disruptive to the current power and money systems.

  • Rick Heil

    My sense is not that advancements in science have stalled, or even slowed, but more akin to being in the ebb and flow of discovery.

    Perhaps a different view is we are much better now seeing the individual trees in amongst the forest. The easier (though not easy) part of discovery is the first encounter with new information - reaching North America, discovering the genome, discovering new fundamental particles of physics, etc. I'd liken this to the low hanging fruit analogy. True enough there are fewer whole new areas of technology or science (new territories) discovered... but those we have found are being deeply explored.

    The harder and longer path is coming to fully study, analyze and understand a new science & technology and that we have done in spades the past quarter century. The volume of scientific and technical literature about the world around us has simply exploded around us.

    To say the internet, as but one example, is simply a refinement of Berners-Lee's first connection of five university computers under a DARPA program vastly minimizes the complexity and evolution - not to mention capacity & capability - that has occurred. Take one example, bitcoin and blockchain, as likely extremely disruptive technologies that only exist due to the evolutionary progress of the internet and distributed computer science. Or more mundane the utter dominance of EBay, Amazon and other online sales methods that have in a way killed the regional shopping mall.
    Same can be said for biology - the advancements in understanding and applying our ever growing understanding of DNA is on the cusp a a whole new wave of innovation including producing synthetic life.
    Additive (aka 3D) printing is creating whole new potentialities that didn't exist even five years ago.
    Elon Musk's SpaceX , and others, are now advancing our capacity to get into space a nearly 1/10th the cost of the old 50's model (that did stagnate for way too long).

    So yea, there have been no new profound insights into aviation but 'simply' refinements. We've not discovered (yet) wormhole travel or some other new form of exoctic transportation to augment and replace aviation.

    My observation is simply I think your view is valid but understates the richness of understanding we've come to know this past 25 years and significantly underestimates the magnitude of a lot of change around us. Not to mention the sheer audacity of the exponential pace at which our understanding is growing and expanding.

    Perhaps we're reaching the limits of what the human mind can grasp and then create from and a new era of AI intelligence will be the next transformative period you seek.

    I highly agree when it comes to social and human change we are in some parts regressing... since our capacity as a civilization to share the knowledge, capacity and fruits seems incapable of adapting at the pace our capacity changes. Our institutions, governance systems and simple patterns of social mores seem incapable of adapting quickly enough and many of us seem to have proverbially buried our heads in the sands at the change underway around us.

    My greatest worry (is it a worry, I'm not sure actually, may be a hope) is we seem to be on the cusp of an Elysium moment.. where a select few among us will likely literally leave this earth behind in the coming 25 years and our species will split... with the modern day Neanderthals left behind on what's left of planet Earth and humanity's 'future' moves on to explore the universe.

    • Jay S

      Elysium is economics hokum. There has been a lot written on the subject of why it makes zero sense. Wealth is a function of how well you can serve the mass of the people, so it's not possible for a few wealthy people to split off and form their own automated society - any technological advances they come up with will be available for reproduction by the middle and lower classes. That is, unless you believe the middle and lower classes are literally incapable of comprehending how the wealthy's technology works...

      • oneproudbrowncoat .

        You're presuming that the middle/lower class is allowed access to the technology. That was the case in earlier centuries- a person found in possession of technology beyond their class was considered a criminal, because "he likely stole it". Technological feudalism is most certainly possible, especially when military technology is involved.

  • SocraticGadfly

    Uhh, interesting, but not complete. There has been a lot of post-1970 progress; it's just that much of it isn't in the "developed world."

    Second, there's nothing wrong with incrementalism.

    Third, do we really NEED SST airplanes? Or manned missions to Mars, for that matter?

    • Michael Hanlon

      No, SST airliners and Mars ships are not 'needed', but some better cancer drugs would be good, as would cheap and clean mass power generation.

      • SocraticGadfly

        Oh, I'll agree on the better drugs, and fusion power, if you mean that. (We're making progress on solar and wind, but the production of solar panels is itself fairly dirty.

        That said, the "War on Cancer" and peaceful fusion power are paralleled by a third ... Artificial Intelligence. On these issues, I don't think it's a lack of progress issue as much as it was a human hubris issue about the ease vs difficulty of the problem 40-50 years ago.

  • Sigmundr Ulfhedinn

    Great article..

  • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

    Hanlon is using inconsistent criteria for innovation. For instance, he says newer medical technologies like stem cell therapy don't count as progress because they're still in embryonic [sic] form and haven't become widely used. Fair point.

    But then he lumps the Internet (and all of computer technology, apparently) into his 1945-1970 generation simply because the first ARPAnet nodes came online in 1969. Network technology in 1970 was absolutely in its infancy, far less relevant than stem cells are today. (This is like pointing to ENIAC and saying computers were developed before 1945 and have only 'incrementally' progressed since.)

    It's easy to roll your eyes at Twitter or Groupon and trivialize the impact of the Internet, but that's only because it's become so enmeshed in our lives that we lose sight of how transformative it is (and will be). To take just one example, Wikipedia seemed like sheer science fiction in the '70s (and did appear as such in some SF novels.) How much is worldwide free access to the world's knowledge transforming developing countries?

    It's also incorrect that the development of the Internet was driven entirely by academia. UC had a minor role (MIT was much more significant.) The whole ARPAnet project was driven by the DoD, and major amounts of work were done by companies like BBN, MITRE and Bell Labs. The Ethernet technology that made modern networks possible came out of Xerox PARC.

    • Thinking_Ape

      So the internet is the one impactful technology that has really come to fruition since 1970. That doesn't change the argument much, considering how much impactful technology came of age during the so-called 'Golden Quarter'.

      • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

        It's not the only one. Personal computers, cellphones, video, computer graphics, gay rights, trans rights, any number of important musical styles...

        And a lot of the things he lumps into the "golden quarter" were getting started earlier. Most of them, in fact, from feminism to rocketry (the basics of which were developed by Germany during WWII.)

        A technology or cultural shift doesn't happen at a specific moment in time. It takes a long time to go from inspiration to prototype to early development to refinement. As I said, the author is cherry-picking and being arbitrary about what buckets he assigns various technologies to. ("The birth of the gay rights movement" is another one that just barely squeaks in, with the Stonewall riots in 1969. Whereas feminism had gone through at least two or three generations by 1945.)

        • Thinking_Ape

          It seems like you're reaching a bit. 4 of your 6 examples are only really important because of the internet.

          • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

            No they're not. Personal computers and cellphones were hugely important even before they got Internet access. Video technologies are unrelated to the net (think videotape, video editing, instant replay, movie rentals...) Computer graphics have nothing to do with networking.

          • http://vimeo.com/evolv Marcus Abundis

            Well then, how about those technologies largely being advanced based on Shannon Information Theory 1948 – variations on a theme as far as I am concerned.

          • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

            Then automobiles, jet planes and space travel are all "just" variations on the theme of thermodynamics (19th century). And radio and television are "just" variations on the theme of electromagnetism (also 19th century.)

            If you're determined to trivialize huge areas of progress you can certainly find ways to do so. It just doesn't seem like a very interesting exercise to me. It feels like a sort of cheerleading, like "jet planes are better than computers!" Kind of like arguing about which rock band is better. Aren't we a little old for that?

          • Lance Sjogren

            The argument you make in jest I find to be actually a rather good case for the point of view you do not support.

          • Lance Sjogren

            Take a look at cars for example. What we drive today is essentially the same vehicle that existed one hundred years ago, with a whole lot of fine tuning. But not any revolutionary change.

          • apeon

            Chariots with springs and ic engines----anyone can argue any point of view to promote themselves-ideas-etc.---and it gets down to those who can DO those who can't talk-comment-advise

          • Noibn48

            Excellent posts. Being more historical (and probably older) than technical, I like your rock band argument. Still, and it's only my opinion, I believe it;s the invention of the transistor that is the basic DNA key to the technological advances we have seen since then. No transistor and many of your non-internet and examples don't happen. A VCR with vacuum tubes?

            And that is why I put the little transistor in the top three of humankind's inventions after the wheel and printing. Like the first two, and like the Beatles in rock and roll, it changed everything.

          • Billy Vaughn

            Good points, some people are just missing your point. There have been huge advances in the last 30 years. They are just different ones and while we certainly weigh risk differently that we did decades ago things are still being discovered and have been. The devices that make the internet possible are many and the technologies behind them are many. Most people have no clue what all it takes to route a packet across the internet. Other than the development of the early protocols most of this has happened in the last couple of decades. Networking has driven business and new startups that may be different than building more cars or getting rid of smallpox but it's still progress. How about all the progress made to treat Aids. How about progress to prevent Malaria, which have been going on for a long time but we continue to get better. There are so many examples you can't list them all here.

          • Lance Sjogren

            There have been huge advances in the last 30 years, but they are not very well matched to where the greatest needs are.

            We are on the eve of the twilight of the fossil fuel era and still have no energy source to continue human civilization as the fossil fuel era dies out, we're not even close to having one.

          • http://energyknot.blogspot.co.uk/ WilliamAshbless

            Nuclear fission R&D is now so heavily regulated and pitifully funded that we're only seeing the occasional small incremental development, itself taking over a decade to deploy. Capital rarely invests in enterprises with a ROI over 5 years.

          • ejochs

            Could we build a dam in the country? How long would it take compared to 75 years ago. How about a Panama Canal?

        • Jared Simpson

          Thanks for your intelligent, informed, and nuanced rebuttal to this absurd article. Some of the folks taking issue with you are not intellectually equipped to do so.

        • http://energyknot.blogspot.co.uk/ WilliamAshbless

          All your tech examples are computer related and the internet is just network of computers. The only thing you contradicted was Internet for microcomputer.

        • Hador_NYC

          Rocketry goes even farther back, the father of Modern Rocketry, the man who inspired all those Germans including Von Braun, was an American, Robert Goddard who did his first experiments in the first quarter of the 20th Century. That was also the same time when Whittle invented the Jet Engine. His whole paper is wrong, other than the general concept that we have become less risk tolerant. that is true.

        • ChrisinCT

          The effects of the internet/computers on our culture have not been more profound than television which existed in the "golden Quarter." The main changes effecting society as the author points out were economic and social.

          Gay rights did start in this period.

          There are NO important musical styles that started after this period. Period.

          • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

            I tend to disagree regarding television. It was in general only a gloss on radio - a technology that DID have a major impact. All TV did was to extend the one-way communication model controlled by Big Media (and the government). Occasionally it did break new ground and was certainly important, but by no means revolutionary.

            The internet, on the other hand, has more or less turned the world of information access upside down, through its interactivity and search capabilities. Just think how different it is today to be able to find out just about any item of information you want. It may not always be perfect, but it's a quantum jump away from having to schlep down to the public library to consult reference books, pore through card catalogs, and prowl moldy stacks of journals.

            Of course, the internet isn't really "a technology" as such, but rather a convergence of many technologies and behaviors in a rather novel sociotechnical space. Almost all the technological elements that empower the internet date from the Quarter - but it has been the accomplishment of more recent decades to put them all together into a workable social configuration. It remains to be seen if it will continue to have its revolutionary impacts or be subsumed by the corporate media -but its effects are undoubtable.

      • Far_from_home

        His assertions are a childish romp through Boomer supposed superiority that never existed. The era he mentions was full of innovation spurred by needs of the time and developing capabilities. At the same time, many of the designs innovators utilized were originally developed by great thinkers such as Da Vinci and the Chinese sages, as well as the racist Nazis.

        The current era of innovation is just getting started. In the next 20 years, AI, expanded space travel, genetic engineering, and new building materials will be online. The big difference between the 1941-1970 era and the time that has followed is we have seen a steady decline in availability of these technologies to the general public, due to economics - whether the economics are rooted in individual capacity to pay or in profitability.

    • Greg Allan

      I agree with you about the inconsistency in his criteria for innovation, but you lost me on the second point.

      The author's assertion was not that the work was being done solely in academia, but that it was funded by the public, rather than by private enterprise. You're correct that much of the work was done by private contractors, alongside government agencies, but you're essentially in agreement with the author that most of the funding for this work came from the government.

      • http://mooseyard.com/Jens Jens Alfke

        Well, I was reacting to his statement "The early internet came out of the University of California, not Bell or Xerox", which is quite wrong and indicates the author is weak on the history of computer technology.

        It's also interesting that he describes all of this as _public_ funding, when it was specifically _defense_ funding, ARPA being a DOD organization. As another commenter below has noted, many more of the major technologies of the 20th century were either funded by defense spending or spin-offs of military research. It may be that as war between First World nations spun down later in the century, that firehose of research money dwindled.

        • http://vimeo.com/evolv Marcus Abundis

          And the DOD is not set up to serve a public interest and is NOT publicly funded!? This is a surprise!

          You seem to miss his main point being our collective attitudes toward risk . . . his claims about technology innovation on the decline are only mildly overblown.

        • SmilingAhab

          As a relative to someone who works in DoD research, I can say that "defense" spending should be in quotations, because half of the stuff they work on, they work on because research money is more liquid and it's where R&D can get done without getting the axe, like NASA and the DHHS. Many projects I've heard of are extremely tangential, if at all related, to actual national defense.

          • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

            Most if not all the research projects at NSF that have been so strongly criticized by the House Committee on Science and Technology wouldn't be out of place in the DARPA portfolio, where they would invite little scrutiny. I suspect that there continues to be a lot of interesting behavioral science research going on behind those closed doors, although my direct knowledge of this is somewhat out of date.

    • the biophysicist

      I have a theory that almost all computer innovation comes from what I call the 4 pillars.
      1 military
      2 games
      3 porn
      4 loan geniuses (like tim berners lee)
      corporations don't innovate they comnercialise preexisting ideas. Xerox parc and google are the exceptions that proove the rule.

      • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

        PARC managed to give away or allow to be stolen virtually everything that they ever invented. The Xerox STAR was the first really workable GUI, and it was seeing it that convinced Steve Jobs and Apple that the GUI could be implemented in the first Mac. Ethernet and the Token Ring were also essentially given away. There was an interesting book on this called Fumbling the Future (http://www.amazon.com/Fumbling-Future-Invented-Personal-Computer/product-reviews/1583482660).

    • John

      The hardware and software for computers are made from scratch. Making Stem Cells and the other required materials for tissue growth from scratch is not happening.

  • Julian

    Many of the big problems we are facing today are much more difficult than the ones we have solved. Biology, in particular, has turned out to be incredibly complex. Climate change is a huge political challenge - how can we even begin to address it when half the voters in the US refuse to acknowledge it?

    • Jay S

      The climate has always changed. Most record high temps globally have been recorded pre-1965, so the earth isn't really warming that rapidly. Arctic sea ice is plenty. CO2 emissions per capita are falling and solar power is becoming cost competitive with coal. There just really isn't a lot to be worried about here. The models and predictions are way off, and there's no evidence taxation or regulation can offset carbon enough to make a real difference anyway. It's just another way to grab money and power from the western middle classes.

  • flowirin

    LSD.
    all those new ideas, new ways of thinking, visionary change. all of them required mental flexibility and openness. we live in a world dominated by coffee, alcohol and cocaine, plus countless nervous system depressants, anxiolytics and anti-depressants. all designed to keep you numb, dumb or happy with what is.
    taking a look at many modern innovators, they claim inspiration through chemistry, something that was abundant in your golden quarter.
    we have declared a 'war on drugs', but a better way to put it would be a 'war on alternative thinking". society says it is not OK to explore the mind, but where else is innovation found?
    with the ultra rich, as you rightly pointed out, demanding a zombie like consumer base, endlessly working and consuming to provide the support for the rich's lifestyles, what need is there for change, when they have their luxury. better stifle it, rather that risk it being lost.

    • Julian

      I believe coffee and alcohol had been invented before the 20th century, and I doubt that a significant percentage of scientists and engineers are using cocaine...

      • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

        Sherlock Holmes was a regular user of cocaine - injectable, yet.

        • jhertzli

          Is one of the side effects of LSD an inability to distinguish between fiction and reality?

        • http://texrat.net/ texrat

          ...and a fictional character.

    • ismellittoo

      IIRC coffee was an important drug in the enlightenment. It's a stimulant and got people to gather and talk, something kings didn't like.

    • jhertzli

      Strange... I thought the slowdown might have been due to the fact that a large fraction of potential innovators were getting stoned.

  • Thinking_Ape

    This article so perfectly captures what I've been thinking lately. It hits really close to home as I am a graduate student and I can't help but feel that the entire institution of science is past its peak and decaying.

    Going into science is not something that people are inspired to do much anymore, and it makes sense since science hasn't changed peoples' live much in the last 40+ years.

    • Dagny

      I am fortunate to disagree with you. I'm a graduate student as well (in Materials Science, one of the fields that Michael Hanlon says I would be better served to investigate 50ish years ago). I could not be happier to be delving into science at this moment in history-- I get to produce at the forefront of so many incredible advances. The folks around me take nanofab tools for granted that people in the 90s would have salivated over. With them we are making quantum bits. We are converting "waste heat" into electricity with progressively higher efficiency. We are levitating atoms with light. We are doing what the science fiction writers were dreaming of during the "Golden Quarter".

      We are finally reaching the point where we can simulate materials on the same scale we can controllably synthesize them. At a conference last spring, one of my former professors announced to a packed room that we have at last reached the point that we are limited not by science or technology, but by our creativity when it comes to the materials we can make.

      These are just the advancements in my field. Give me a few minutes to talk to my friends in other departments and they will be as quick to tell you about the incredible things they're working to make a reality.

      I'm sorry you aren't feeling inspired right now. It seems grad school has a way of doing that everyone at some point. But I promise you, things are not nearly as bleak as you (or Michael) seem to think. We live and work in a truly amazing period of advancement, and despite this article, I know there is no time before now that I would prefer to inhabit.

      • Thinking_Ape

        You are living in the insular world of academia. You say that you are working to make incredible things a 'reality'. The closest your incredible things will come to being a reality is the pages of a journal.

        No, things are not bleak. There are enough incremental discoveries out there to make thousands of careers, but it takes a very optimistic person to be inspired by that.

        • Dagny

          You know the adage "When you assume...?" My research is industry funded by a corporation that hopes to put my device into every smart phone they make, which could fundamentally change the way they're used (in life saving ways). A reality slightly larger that the pages of a journal and a reality I am quite comfortable being inspired by.

          There is a whole lot more out there than merely incremental advances. In the scope of things, we hardly have any idea how things work, from the bottom to the top. There is so much more to figure out on pretty much every front. Given that frontier, there is a tremendous amount of work to be done. From the sounds of it, you may need to start posing different questions.

  • AJDEdinburgh

    He's conflating technological and scientific progress with cultural progress, unfortunately the two don't go hand in hand. There is nothing wrong with the level of technological innovation in our world. it's the government and industry support that doesn't have enough funding, the stakeholders with the money are the ones that need convincing and revolutionary change. If and when that happens it may be too late to make any sort of positive impact.

  • AJDEdinburgh

    It's a pretty cheap shot to write this article lamenting how crappy things are when there are real concrete strategic ways to influence stakeholders and influence change. This is where he should have focused his efforts in writing this piece.

  • Maggiemay

    You lost me at 'clean' nuclear energy.

    • Earthstar

      Thorium reactors are clean. Maybe that's what he meant.

      • Andygsept

        Maggiemay, has probably never even heard of Molten Salt Reactors(Thorium or otherwise). Those engaging in blanket dismissals of nuclear energy, usually don't know an awful lot about it, and still think all reactor designs are the same as those in Chernobyl and Fukushima.

        • Maggiemay

          And molten salt is like super safe. I mean, you can use potholders.

          And if anything happens to it, the reactors just shut themselves off and wait patiently counting stray neutrons.

          Not that anything ever goes rong; because the reacotrs are operated by human beings who nver make mistekas.

          • Andygsept

            Yes,.. that's the whole idea of passive safety,.. it doesn't need active involvement to shut itself down or prevent a meltdown.

    • Jay S

      Nuclear is actually the cleanest energy source.

      • Michael Hanlon

        On any scale, yes.

        • Maggiemay

          Great, we'll store the, hmm we can't really call it waste, howbout poison, no...leavings! That's it.

          We'll store the leavings in your county. Thanks for supporting the cleanest energy source!

          • Andygsept

            Most of the waste is actinides which could be held onto as fuel for subsequent fast neutron reactors.
            The real high level waste is less than 2% of the overall spent fuel rods and is the fission daughter products. Fortunately these only have a dangerous lifetime of a few hundred years and thus containment can be designed for these when they are separated out from the rest of the waste.
            The high level non-reusable waste is only a couple of tons per gigawatt year of electricity,.. so not a whole lot.

          • Maggiemay

            Only a couple of tons per gigawatt?

            Gee, we only use 25,000 terawatts in the good old USA each year.

            And if 1 terawatt = 1000 gigawatts, that makes what, 3 tons, 4 tons?

          • Andygsept

            Actually you have to compare it with the ecological impact and land use of other sources,.. as well as cost.
            For example wind and solar are expensive unreliable, use more space,,. and not necessarily squeaky clean if you consider the rare earth metals that need to be mined. Their production also results in toxic waste,,.. that has to be stored somewhere too.

    • Trent

      Scientific American: "the fly ash emitted by a [coal] power plant—a by-product from burning coal for electricity—carries into the surrounding environment 100 times more radiation than a nuclear power plant producing the same amount of energy." http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/coal-ash-is-more-radioactive-than-nuclear-waste/ Obviously, coal plants produce a lot more carbon dioxide and other air pollutants too.

      • Maggiemay

        And obviously if this hack tried to claim that coal was clean, he'd have lost me then too.

        • Trent

          The point I was trying to make is that existing nuclear fission is massively cleaner than fossil fuels in every respect, including radioactivity, which is the evil that people normally associate with nuclear. Many environmentalists have come around to nuclear power. See for example Stewart Brand (founder of the Whole Earth Catalog) arguing for the merits of nuclear power at TED: http://www.ted.com/talks/debate_does_the_world_need_nuclear_energy?language=en

          But I don't know if this was the author's point. The author said we *could* have clean nuclear power, which maybe indicates he had in mind a form of nuclear fission that has not yet been invented, or nuclear fusion, which is the holy grail of energy, but is currently in the prototype phase and has not yet reached a commercially viable state.

        • oneproudbrowncoat .

          Vide the thorium fuel cycle.

    • Andygsept

      It's uninformed opinions like that, that are partly responsible for a decrease in progress.
      Aside from nuclear being the energy source with the lowest direct ecological footprint (except for geothermal maybe, which is geographically restricted), it also has the most potential for further reducing humanities footprint by facilitating energy intensive processes such as clean fuel synthesis, seawater desalination, and powering vertical farms.
      If the arguments against nuclear in the wake of three mile island and Chernobyl had been more rational, with the view that passively safe designs be adopted, as opposed to blanket moratoria on an entire energy source we could be way ahead of where we are now.

      • Maggiemay

        And which alien civilization are we to get these 'safe' designs from?

        Cause, ours all suck.

        • Andygsept

          Generation 3 reactors are typically passively safe, so we could use those for example,.. as for generation 4 designs like Molten Salt Reactors, Dual Fluid Reactors and Lead Cooled fast reactors, they're all viable,. passively safe,.. low pressure and would use up all of the actinide fuel.

          BTW, I hope you realise you're only proving my initial point regarding the overwhelming cluelessness of most of the anti-nuclear brigade.

          • Maggiemay

            How'd you like to buy a parachute?

            It's typically safe!

          • oneproudbrowncoat .

            Ever worn one?

          • Maggiemay

            oh and BTW, you're WELCOME!

        • oneproudbrowncoat .

          Please elaborate.

  • Jay S

    How can the private sector innovate in anything significant when it's regulated to death?

    • http://yesrousselot.wordpress.com/ Yann R.

      I have the opposite view. How can the private sector innovate anything really revolutionary when its goals are dictated 100% by profit margins?

      • Lance Sjogren

        Because the path to profits is to come up with something that people find so beneficial to them that they are willing to pay good money for it.

        • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

          The problem is that the profit motive, particularly when it is construed as it is today to focus almost entirely on maximizing short-term returns, has a hard time supporting the creation of the basic science that applied science and engineering can then turn into interesting products and services. Traditionally (and this goes back at least to the 17th century) the biggest single funder of basic science investigation has been government - either because it was needed for national purposes such as defense, or simply because it was in the national interest to have science advance.

          Basic science isn't something that comes out of lone geniuses tinkering in their garages; it comes from large arrays of people and equipment that are highly organized and therefore quite expensive to support. It's clear that private industry these days supports relatively little basic science. But if we're going to have any substantial technological progress, someone's got to organize and pay for it.

          • oneproudbrowncoat .

            That also happened in our concept of wealth as well. In the late 19th-century, wealth founded dynasties; but that lessened over time. Today, a multi-millionaire is unlikely to attempt to found a multi-generational fortune.

  • Jay S

    The whole idea that war drives progress is marvelous pro-state propaganda. "War is the health of the state." Keynesians often proclaim that WW2 is what "ended the Great Depression", so I guess we can chalk up the 20th century's technological progress to war also. Every anti-libertarian psychopath who wishes to rule over others and enjoys control, oppression, death, hate, etc. will announce how "unfortunate" this conclusion is. They might even want to call it "an inconvenient truth" - after all, humans are also causing the Earth to heat up and destroying nature. Let's raise taxes to 85% and start a hundred endless proxy wars in the Middle East and vote for Mitt Romney and Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush. Onward to progress!

    • Lance Sjogren

      Well, I believe Keynes once said you could stimulate the economy by hiring people to dig holes and then pay them a second time to fill the holes back up. Pretty analgous to war, except then you can stimulate the economy even more by paying people to rebuild the cities you hired them to demolish.

    • http://texrat.net/ texrat

      Despite how one may feel about war, it has been *objectively* shown throughout history to be an amazing motivator for innovation. Sad, yes, but still true.

  • CKTC

    Wow, I'm surprised everybody missed one big issue that affects this "golden quarter"

    In the past, before 1970's, the Jews, the Catholics, the Italians, the Irish and other groups were marginalized. Simply put, few career paths were available, and ofc a career in science was available because the elites didn't want to work hard to compete there. But ofc, together with the civil rights movement, their situation was improved. The smartest people from these groups used to become scientists (also note that there were very few wasp scientists in the golden quarter because they had other opportunities), but after more opportunities have been opened to them, now they become bankers, doctors, lawyers, techies, real estate brokers, etc. Look at other scientists: now they are all imported. What happens is that with this switch, the cultural values shifted: being in academia or a scientist is not regarded that high socially. Therefore, even the people in academia are looking to capitalize on something, so they supplement their career with consulting, startups or political office (in the case of economists).

    It's been studied, and an entrepreneur today on average only captures 2% of the innovation benefit to society. We need more innovation and we need a system that rewards them more. One problem is that with many innovations, it's hard to solve but easy to copy (drugs is a classical example), and this is a disincentive to innovators.

  • http://katewalton.tumblr.com/ Kate Walton

    You had me until you implied that Chernobyl and Three Mile Island weren't real disasters because not many people died. The evironmental impact wasn't important??

  • polistra24

    Two words, young man. Tenure. Money.

    Too much of both.

  • Simon Very

    I'm not saying that physics drives all progress, but it is important, and theoretical physics has been getting nowhere much since roughly the end of the golden quarter the article invokes.

  • Michael_Shores

    Consider my grandfathers' generation. They were both born in 1885 into a world with horses, trains, steamship, telegraph offices, outdoor plumbing and food that was mostly locally grown. In their lifetimes, automobiles, airplanes, electrification, radio, TV, refrigeration and nuclear power. My dad's father lived to see Armstrong walk on the moon and the early days of cell phones and computers. So it does seem that in many ways the rate of big technological change is slowing.

  • John Cram

    The problem is where peoples efforts (time and MONEY) are being directed towards.

    Example: Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure ---- millions of people raising money to fight breast cancer...supposedly. Where does the money REALLY go? Well they tell you *(not in very much granular detail) but lets just take the part the goes to "scientist aka research" really who? And from there, lets say they "find a cure" you think they are going to give it to you? Nope you will still have to BUY the medication! Comical. Supporting finding cures to entities that will turn around and CHARGE you for it! The 1%ers must really get a good laugh out of that one! The suckers pay so that a "cure" is found that only then have access to!

  • Pawn666

    Military spending was also highest during the time period of the greatest technological achievements. Is there a correlation?

  • Marc

    "In the 1960s, feminists faced social ridicule, media approbation and violent hostility."

    ap·pro·ba·tion noun ˌa-prə-ˈbā-shən

    : praise or approval

    http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/approbation

    Is that really what you meant?? Better invest in a dictionary, Michael.

  • Marc

    As of May 16, 2013, Bill Gates had donated US$28 billion to the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation.
    Susan Buffett's will bestowed about US$2.5 billion on the Buffet foundation, to which her husband's further gifts of US$315 million have been added.
    Larry Page Gave US$177 million to charity in February 2014.
    As of April 28, 2011, 69 billionaires had joined the Giving Pledge campaign and pledged to give 50% or more of their wealth to charity.
    etc. etc. ad nauseum.

    Honestly, I don't know where you 99%-ers get off accusing the "megarich" of being selfish assholes who spend all their money on megayachts and caviar.

    Even if that were true, the wealth they have accumulated results (in principle, at least) from the value they have provided. If you buy candy in a shop, you say thank you, and so does the shop-keeper. If he made a profit from this transaction, then that is now his money. Essentially what you are saying by now wanting to confiscate this profit is that, no, you've changed your mind, and that you would now like to have paid less for your candy. I call this theft.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I was not accusing all the rich of being selfish. I know about Gates, Buffet and so on. But in general there seems to be a sense of entitlement about today's wealthy that was absent a few generations ago.

      • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

        A substantial part of the Gates Foundation's investment in education has been to pursue Gates' own peculiar agenda. When you drop a couple of billion or so into any civil system, your ripples can feel more like tsunamis. One particular Gates preoccupation for a number of years was the concept of breaking up large high schools into smaller ones, on the theory that smaller schools would be able to track kids better and maintain a sense of community. Sounds good, and to their credit, the Foundation did commission the American Institutes for Research, a very high-grade research firm, to conduct a well-designed and effective evaluation (full disclosure: I worked on the early stages of this project while I was at AIR.)

        After the Foundation had spent probably close to $500 million on the project, breaking up some schools and subsidizing others, the evaluation finally concluded (you have to read it closely to see this) that the project left some kids and schools a bit better, more than that a bit worse, and the bulk essentially undisturbed. As a result, it is now somewhat hard to find a reference on the Foundation's website about what was once one of their flagship projects.

        Philanthropy ought to be left to the philanthropes, rather than passed out as thinly disguised pursuits of private agendas.

  • montana83

    In one word - the "green" movement
    Green = Neopagan mysticism
    It is an ideological movement of washed up leftists.
    It is an anti- science group of cultural and economic Marxists masquerading as supporters of science. In fact the Greens are just Communazis and environmentalism is their cover. The world will advance when they are totally discredited.
    The global warming hoax is a start. Many of these clowns are already laughingstocks as the world was supposed to end in 1990, 1995 , 2002 and so forth but somehow we are still here. Even the clowns at the UN IPCC have found no warming for 18 years.

    • awesomerobot

      Wow.

    • Governor_Rick_Scott

      Gee Montana, wouldn't you be happier commenting over on Fox News? This is a grown-up discussion.

  • Abraham_Franklin

    The precautionary principle and the growth of the bureaucratic and regulatory state have taken their toll, at least in the Western world.

    The Empire State Building was erected in 15 months.

    The Freedom Tower, built 70-80 years later, took 6 or 7 years, depending on how one measures it.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Yes. 150 years ago new railways took a few years or even months to build; now they take decades. And back then it was manual labour that got them built. Extraordinary.

  • advancedatheist

    I guess we've started to figure out that "social progress" doesn't really exist. We can gain more knowledge and become more technologically and economically capable, but social and political tinkering can't change the facts of human biodiversity. Education, the great fetish of modern progressivism that it inherited from the Enlightenment, can't make dumb people smart or make women "equal" to men. We really should pay more respect to organic social outcomes because this natural sorting tells a lot about the distribution of human differences.

    For example, my late father, a dirt-poor white Southerner, grew up without any educational enrichment on a farm in Oklahoma, yet he scored so well on the Army's IQ test in 1945 that the Army trained him as a cryptographer, a field he had never heard of before then. By contrast certain minorities in the U.S. have struggled with education for generations no matter what you do for them.

    And we continue to waste educational resources on trying to get girls to go into STEM careers, at the expense of more capable boys, when girls for the most part simply lack the ability and drive to succeed and stick with these career so that the investment pays off.

    In other words, I suspect at least some of the stagnation in hardware progress comes from the misalliocation of scarce resources into this mirage of "social progress." If we went back to more of a merit-based system based on what actually works instead of dismissing this information as an accident of "prejudice" or whatever, I think we would start to head in the direction of the last century's science fiction again.

  • Thomas Kearnan

    Part of it may be long hanging fruit. As time goes on, scientific innovation becomes more and more complex.

    But overall I disagree with the assertion made in this article that innovation has in any way slowed.

    We now have more scientists trained every day, with better educations, than at any time in human history. With the continued addition of millions of more engineers, scientists and educated people coming from the developing nations, added to the growing ability of computers to aid us in our inventions, the progress will continue speed up.

  • http://emarstudio.com/ Erik Mar

    The author's analytic method is abandoned once he gets to his conclusion: a convincing case is made for how innovation was generated during the golden age of capitalism / golden quarter, by showing the interrelationship between political economy and scientific advancement. But then, he attributes the decline of innovation to something "superstructural" and ill-defined, namely, "risk-taking", without any further reference to shifts in the political economy.
    A more consistent line of argumentation would be to note that the scrapping of Bretton Woods shifted the balance of economic power away from the nation-state to the "Virtual Senate" of privately managed capital flows. That led directly to mass outsourcing and the global economy of "comparative advantage", which destroyed the systems of vertical integration that were mainstays of the US economy throughout the Golden Age. It's well known in industry that innovation increases when disparate parts of the same operation can communicate - designers learn from fabricators, and vice versa. Outsourcing decreases that communication as the disparate components are separated across continents, and, when searching for causal explanations, it's more convincing to focus on larger trends than on nebulous attitude shifts.

  • Paul Stakas

    That is an interesting piece with many acute observations. I would not go as far as saying that technological (let alone human) progress has stopped, but rather would say that progress has slowed down in many areas and strongly shifted to information technology. The interesting questions are then why did that happen (descriptive) and is that a good state of affairs (normative)?

    The author seems to imply that societies (and by implication humanity) would be better off with focus on engineering/ health/transport technology rather than IT, which in itself does not necessarily improve human condition. I am not so sure of that. Progress in IT resulted in global spread of information, knowledge and education. Since, speaking philosophically, happiness is in the mind, accessibility of knowledge and education is a necessity for any desired state of human condition. And while there is a certain sense of absurdity in the fact that the price of mobile messaging app WhatsApp is the same as yearly NASA budget, I would see it as an externality of progress in IT (as well as facts like that some of the smartest people on earth are working in areas like quant-trading or mobile ad optimizing). Hence, in generally, I would not be so gloomy in this respect.

    On the descriptive question, I would agree with many thoughts of the author, but would put in economic and social terms: economically, information has probably the biggest marginal rate-of-return of all possible assets in a market and naturally in our market-based economy, it drives many businesses and thus results in development of information infrastructure and implicitly advances progress in IT.

    I would agree that risk-aversion plays a role today, in compare to the "golden quarter" and I would put it to the political and social climate. "Golden quarter" was a time of sharp ideological US-USSR conflict as well as a post-war period. I am too young to know much of this period (at least in the West), but for me it seems that the Western Zeitgeist was that of extraordinary dynamism, hope, confidence and daring. I can only compare it to the general Western Zeitgeist of nowadays (visible from the headlines of major media outlets): uncertainty, fear (of economy, of immigrants, of terrorism, you name it), pessimism. There is no Apollo landings, no desire "to beat the communists", no aspirations of a better tomorrow. There is much to say here about contributing causes, but I think it has much to do with the state of western political and economic thinking and where it is leading us. And if we are to change something, we should start from this end, since I believe that technology itself does not make people happier (however you would define the term), but rather it could be of great help for the people to find happiness themselves.

  • Matt

    As someone whose livelihood depends on technology, I feel that more has changed from about 1990-2002 than has from 2002-2014. Back then things were getting digitized, things like mp3s, recordable CDs/DVDs, digital cameras, scanners and hard drives that could hold decent amounts of information were coming out. Back then, a 3-4 year old computer was pretty much to old to really do anything, but now, unless you are trying to really high end processing, even something 5-7 years old is fine for pretty much anyone.Besides streaming audio/video and smartphones it seems that in the last dozen years its just been faster speeds and more capacities than any huge change

  • CapitalistRoader

    Capitalism was once the great engine of progress. It was capitalism in the 18th and 19th centuries that built roads and railways, steam engines and telegraphs (another golden era). Capital drove the industrial revolution.

    Excellent points. The relentless attacks on capitalism starting in the mid-30s and continuing to this day certainly make us poorer and less healthy.

    Socialism is a killer disease.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I was trying to be more subtle than that. The sort of capitalism we saw in the 19th Century was a very different beast to the sort we have today. The great venture philanthropists of then would be horrified at the way many of the hyper rich behave today. It is not just a moral point; wealth squandered on yachts or, worse, land, is dead money.

      • CapitalistRoader

        Human nature hasn't changed. You're right that we saw a different kind of capitalism in the 19th Century in that the federal government had yet stick its nose in business. Starting with Lincoln and the railroads, progressing to the insanity of both the 16th Amendment and the Federal Reserve Act, capitalism became enmeshed in government, and government in capitalism. Woodrow Wilson described this unfortunate pairing:

        If the government is to tell big business men how to run their business, then don't you see that big business men have to get closer to the government even than they are now? Don't you see that they must capture the government, in order not to be restrained too much by it? Must capture the government? They have already captured it.

        So I don't think the "hyper rich" of a century ago would have behaved any differently if they were alive today. They would have shoveled their money towards politicians just as today's hyper rich have. And the solution is fewer laws, a much smaller federal government, and a recongnition of the 10th Amendment:

        The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

        • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

          Clearly you know relatively little about the history of the relationship between business and government, which in this country goes back at least until the 1580s, and has been completely chummy ever since. The American Revolution was in essence a commercial conflict. All the states and the Federal government both supported commercial and investment ventures consistently through the 18th and 19th centuries, and were in varying degrees owned by those same ventures. Congress has always been for sale, all the more so before the institution of direct election of senators, when they were selected by state legislatures which were even more cheaply bought. Have you ever heard of "The Octopus" in California? That was the nickname for the Southern Pacific Railroad, which essentially ran the state for its own benefit pretty much from statehood until the 1930s.

          The illusion that there was some "magic era of capitalism" when it was not intimately entangled with government, largely to its own benefit, and when government was not ready willing and able to step in to exercise is powers on behalf of private enterprise, is apparently rampant among those who have not studied history. At least at times government has been able to help business take a somewhat longer and more investment oriented view of its profits, rather than encouraging the slash-and-burn practices of today's financial raiders.

          • CapitalistRoader

            The Interstate Commerce Act of 1887: the first time the feds regulated private business. Graft and corruption follow. And we are all poorer as a result. Wilson's 1913 comments about regulatory capture were spot on, which is ironic because he himself was captured by big business during his two terms.

            The author is ignoring the elephant in the room. Progressive Era regulations started the unholy alliance between federal legislators and big business. That alliance more than any other factor suppressed individual initiative which led to less innovation. 100 years later, it's worse than ever. Eisenhower warned against a similar danger in the growing federal government power in 960:

            Akin to, and largely responsible for the sweeping changes in our industrial-military posture, has been the technological revolution during recent decades.

            In this revolution, research has become central; it also becomes more formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share is conducted for, by, or at the direction of, the Federal government.

            Today, the solitary inventor, tinkering in his shop, has been overshadowed by task forces of scientists in laboratories and testing fields. In the same fashion, the free university, historically the fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery, has experienced a revolution in the conduct of research. Partly because of the huge costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity. For every old blackboard there are now hundreds of new electronic computers.

            The prospect of domination of the nation's scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present and is gravely to be regarded.

          • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

            I suggest that you read any solid economic history of the US to find out about the degree of business/government collaboration from the earliest days. One of my direct ancestors, Joseph Jenks, received the first industrial patent awarded in North America in 1645, by Massachusetts Bay Colony, for an improved water wheel for his ironworks at Saugus MA. Every colonial and then every state government was always hip-deep in business, commerce, and industry - sometimes fairly; often accompanied by rampant corruption. When the Federal government was created, the commerce clause in the constitution explicitly gave it a significant role with regard to business. Tariff policies in particular were the subject of enormous political conflict in the first half of the 19th century. It was under Federal contract that the mass production of gun parts was first developed, with the techniques then being widely distributed and adopted elsewhere. To assume that political corruption relating to business efforts didn't exist in the US until 1885 is purely and simply naive . Business has always sought and received the assistance of government at all levels to achieve its goals, which often include impeding the competition. While political corruption is certainly still an enormous problem, it's probably less prevalent now than at almost any other time in our history. As long as humanity has organizations of any type, there will be multiple levels, and multiple interests to be served - legitimately or illegitimately.

          • CapitalistRoader

            Watch it and weep:

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5-5a6Q54BM

            Federal regulation increased exponentially in the past half century, along with the opportunity for graft and corruption, legal or illegal. The fact that a middle-age man just got killed for selling loose cigarettes tells anyone with sense that we have too many laws. It's insane. What we've devolved to is the criminalization of everything, with jack booted thugs swooping in to take your property even if you broken no laws. It's a sick, paternal society with a few, enlightened clerisy directing the everyday lives of the proletariat. And, guess what, the more you treat citizens like children the more childlike they get. See the move Idiocracy for a glimpse of where we'll be in a few years.

          • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

            I won't argue that we live in an over-regulated society, in which the Federal government is closely implicated (though I would note that the deplorable New York case had nothing whatever to do with Federal regulation but with local city laws). All I've said is that the traditions of close business/government collaboration, including regulation, are part and parcel of the American experience, not some brand-new condition imposed by pointy-headed people from without, and that regulation is as frequently sought by business as it is resisted. However much blather is offered up by business executives about the sins of over-regulation, it generally takes no more than one or two tries to get them to identify certain laws and regulations that they think are just dandy. Their objections are not rooted in principles, but in the targets.

            It's also true that regulation of personal behavior is as old as the European settlement of this continent, imported from a rich and pungent tradition there. Massachusetts Bay Colony closely regulated what people were allowed to wear depending on their social station, just as it had been done in Europe. And at least we no longer hang Quakers for preaching their doctrines, as was common in those Good Old Days.

          • CapitalistRoader

            ...and that regulation is as frequently sought by business as it is resisted.

            Exactly! That's the essence of regulatory capture: Politicians write laws favorable to big business, keeping potential competitors out, and in return those big businesses pay graft in the form of campaign contributions.

            The Orwellian termed net neutrality is a perfect example. Politicians need another source of cash. Content providers - Hollywood, Google, Netflix, etc. want to continue the free ride on ISPs' infrastructure streaming movies to their customers. That infrastructure isn't free so ISPs want to charge those big bandwidth users extra for hogging all that bandwidth. This should be a simple commercial transaction, with terms decided by the market.

            But, lo and behold, Google and Hollywood have Obama in their pocket thanks to millions in campaign contributions not only to him but to the DNC, left wing PACs, etc. And it's payback time. So now Obama's pushing net neutrality. And he may well be successful. Politicians of both parties stand to benefit from new reg's. It will be a new, perpetual fow of cash from both content providers and ISPs.

            And the internet will go from an amazing, constantly innovating, privately delivered service to a moribund, high regulation/low innovation quasi public utility. I'm surprised the author didn't touch on net neutrality in his article about innovation.

        • oneproudbrowncoat .

          Please stop. The South isn't going to "Rise Again" and Reagan is not the savior.

  • GlennC777

    One interpretation is that the first half of the twentieth century primarily involved advancements in mechanical or physical capabilities: skyscrapers, aircraft, infrastructure and transportation. Most hard physical limits had been reached by around this time: supersonic travel is possible but subsonic is much more efficient; higher land speed travel is likewise decreasingly efficient; taller buildings tend to be less efficient.

    The second half primarily involved advancements in electronics, biology and chemistry: advancing medical technology, communications, computing technology; the first steps to understanding the human genome, and so on.

    I believe the author is misguided in setting aside the particular years he chooses as being particularly unique. The early decades of the century saw tremendous advances in most of the same areas, some of which continued through WWII, some of which were interrupted by it. I also believe he overly conflates technological and social advancement. Although there are clearly interrelationships, I have trouble accepting his argument for a common causality between the social advancements of the postwar period and the technological advancements he cites.

    I am sympathetic to some of the other points made but, unfortunately, do not see much in the way of cohesive, logical arguments supporting them.

    Most importantly, I disagree with the overall thesis. I have no doubt that our more recent period will be viewed in the future as a continuation of the immense progress made during this Golden Quarter; and there are many promising areas of nascent advance that seem likely to fuel technological revolutions of their own in the future. We are able now to view the advancements of the Golden Quarter with a historical perspective that doesn't yet exist for more recent decades. With time, it will come.

  • Belisarius85

    Great technological leaps cause similarly great amounts of social change. It could (and has) been argued that the amazing prosperity of post-WWII America was a key cause of the Civil Rights movement.
    But perhaps society can only change so quickly, given the general (little 'c') conservative tendencies of humanity. Once you start getting significant social change due to increases in technology, society destabilizes a bit, which undermines the social support necessary for further technological improvements. The 'engine' stalls.
    And that 'engine' can't get started again until everything stabilizes. It seems like that was maybe happening in the late 80's, but then the Cold War ended and the Internet era began, and everything destabilized again and much more quickly.

  • Ogn_Dulk

    i didn't know we defeated smallpox during the the golden quarter but i have said all my life that the 17 year crusade by scientists supported by public donations to eradicate polio was one of the high marks of our society.

  • Wayne Martin

    Which begs the question: Why is it that wars are associated with technical innovations? Not to be trite, but necessity is the mother of invention. And war certainly makes action necessary.

    But flip that around: the dire consequences of failure are necessary but not sufficient to spur wide spread innovation. The atom bomb could not have been created prior to the industrial revolution. The Internet could not be created prior to wide spread adoption of telephony. Rural electrification in the US could not be created prior to FDR, the Great Depression, copper ore discoveries, and predictable processes for mass producing wire.

    I've heard about war my whole 62 years. Korea. Cuba. Vietnam. Granada. Gulf-n. I was taught about the Good War. I was taught that war was good for population control. I was taught that war caused great innovations to occur.

    I now believe war doesn't cause any such thing. Given the right motivation and resources, we could do anything we choose, and without the need for a war. However, war strips us of any daydreams, fantasies, illusions of grandeur, and forces us to focus in ways that we would normally not.

    The correlation of technology and war is real. The causation is not.

    • Lance Sjogren

      Eloquently stated.

  • eric

    One long BS article almost entirely based on a greater appreciation for initial discovery than for advancement.

    We're progressing rapidly and just fine, its just that these days we're trying to take commercial planes into space, not just in the air. Without the latter already achieved before our birth, we may appreciate the leap a little more.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Name me one flying prototype commercial spaceplane designed as transport that is more than a website ....

  • wgone

    The simplest answer is the rise of feminism and its ills. Education, politics and law have been hijacked by these parasites.

    • Paul Stakas

      @wgone, I hope you are being sarcastic. Otherwise I am surprised of your ability to read this magazine.

      • wgone

        I would think that the ability to write is inclusive of the ability to read. And i forgot to mention, the biggest problem is the Manginas that support feminism.

      • oneproudbrowncoat .

        He's just busy waiting for the Rapture.

  • jdgalt

    I place the lion's share of the blame on the green movement, many of whom don't seem to even want the human race to continue. Certainly any tech, old or new, that would provide humans with more or cheaper energy, more choices of diet or medicine, or more convenience (such as the car) is demonized by the greens, for no valid reason. They claim to be afraid of unknown consequences or protecting us against calamities such as climate change, but the calamities are made-up for the purpose and the unknown always turns out to be known perfectly well, but they just won't admit it.

    Their real agenda appears to be to destroy the rich world, and the capitalist system which produces that wealth. Real progress demands both be extended to the rest of the world, and in fact the earth's capacity to support us won't be safe until we do so.

    • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

      The rich appear to be doing a pretty good job of destroying the world all by themselves. It's the emergence of rentier capitalism that's tied up vast amounts of money in essentially unproductive investments rather than investing it in new technology or infrastructure, as the article notes. This is further fueled by the incessant demand for short term returns, which discourages investment further and all but eliminates the prospects for funding of anything even potentially risky. The rampant corruption and insider maneuvers at the large international financial institutions is mind-boggling in its scope, and goes virtually unchallenged by a government carefully manipulated into impotent fuming across meaningless party lines. Their aim appears to achieve a single global standard of living more or less equivalent to that of Bangladesh, except for the elite enclaves defended by their private armies.

      Against this massed economic power, your suggestion that a few ecologically minded folks could exercise any meaningful influence would be laughable, if it were not so obviously a piece of agent provocateur work.

  • sujith sekhar

    "Chernobyl (which killed only dozens)" ....oh killed only dozens... must be okay then.

    • Michael Hanlon

      No, not OK. But coal kills thousands of people a year. Are those deaths less important because they are not 'radiation deaths'?

    • oneproudbrowncoat .

      The oil fields currently being exploited here in the U.S., in North Dakota, have killed the same amount- and you probably don't want to know (as awful as it is) about how dangerous coal mining still is in this country (even though we're supposedly leaders in work safety). So I ask if you're concerned with these as well, or if you are perhaps using a pretense that is false.

  • siksikayi

    Could it be that the correlation between the expansion of the welfare state and this decline in innovation is behind this phenomenon? For instance, in the USA, where ~48 million people are on food stamps, it's easy to see how that money could do quite a bit of research.

    • OlyJan

      I just finished watching Scrooge "The Christmas Carol" on TV. Seems even he got over starving people as a motivator.

      • siksikayi

        Don't just let your knee jerk - think about it. Take a look at the us budget back when nasa received 4%

  • OlyJan

    It would be interesting to see this article published in a psychology magazine - I think the discussion would be much different. My mind was preoccupied not with the tech-talk but with consumerism and celebrity. I must assume that 'progress' from 1945 to 1971 was primarily brought by adults - people who were adults by 1945. What we can say with little controversy is that these people, as they were growing into their professions, were not preoccupied with advertising, consumerism, social media, celebrity "look at me!!", etc. How many of our people are spending their developing years devoted to shopping, wanting to be a 'Real Housewife", "The Voice", and 'selfies'? The adults bringing 'progress' then also had a sense of Nation (not "Homeland" ad-speak). As a person in my 60's and politically active - and loud in the streets - I can no longer think that my marching for/against something in my NW state has any effect on Georgia, Texas, Kansas, etal. There can be no National policies that move us forward with the power of government and business, who in that old era recognized that we were a Nation with a (somewhat) unified goal of progress.
    (With recognition of the many nuances and complexities I did not not mention.) I say this is a psychological problem - we live in a country where too many people are responding to "Squirrel!"

  • Lewis Orne

    "Chernobyl (which killed only dozens)", you said. What a way to completely misrepresent that disaster. Damn if you don't sound like a shill for the nuclear industry..

    • Michael Hanlon

      I am not a shill for anyone. I fully support safe, clean repliable civilian nuclear power as our best hope of generating large amounts of electricity, reliably and cleanly, in the short-medium term. If something better comes along I'll support that instead. Chernobyl was bad, but no way as bad as most people continue to believe.

      • Lewis Orne

        Tell that to the children of Chernobyl !!!!!!

        • oneproudbrowncoat .

          Show data or it's BS. Seriously. Cite some sources.

  • nagleonce

    What we haven't had in the last 50 years is a new major energy source. From the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution up to 1973 or so, new energy sources drove progress. Since then, we haven't had a new concentrated energy source.

    That's why space travel has gone nowhere. Rockets got about as good as they can get with chemical fuels half a century ago. Since then, they haven't become significantly more powerful or cheaper. The fuel consumption of an airplane triples when it goes supersonic, which is why commercial aircraft are still subsonic.

    Interestingly, the energy situation is looking up. Solar power is, at long last, cost effective anywhere with a moderately sunny climate. Fracking, although it creates problems of its own, does work. Lockheed-Martin's Skunk Works thinks they can crack fusion, and they're an organization with a history of making things work.

    As for why the quality of life isn't improving for most Americans, that's a property of capitalism. Capitalism optimizes for profits, not individual income. Some of the pressure for a more equitable distribution of income in the 1945-1975 period came from fear of communism. There was a time when it looked like communism might actually work better than capitalism. Capitalism had to provide a higher standard of living to be competitive in the political sphere. After communism tanked, capitalism achieved an ideological monopoly, and like most monopolies, became self-serving.

  • neverumind

    1971 is a pretty arbitrary date. Guess the author didn't want to make it 1981, the year Reagan took office.

    • Michael Hanlon

      It wasn't arbitrary. 1971 marked the end of the post-war economic boom, Bretton Woods etc.

  • Andrew

    Nice piece. Long, slow moving piece.

    Though I will have to argue with, "any old-style racist thinking is met with widespread revulsion."

    The Republican Party hates everything President Obama says, and the underlining reason is because he's black. And when Hilary Clinton takes office in 2016, we are going to see sexism at it's worst for 4-8 years.

    Plus look at all the police black/white racism crime going on. Racism is alive and well, which is really sad. We are about 2 steps ahead of slavery in the 1860s, and even that might be a bit generous.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Racism is alive and well, sadly, but in places like the US it is a shadow of its former self.

      • oneproudbrowncoat .

        Depends upon which segment of the population (coupled with the degree of control that segment has relative to its size) you're looking at. In law enforcement it's continuing unabated, with no effective social checks.

  • Your Pedantic Father

    This was an interesting and enjoyable article. However, I found the premise steeped in nostalgia for simpler times rather than an objective evaluation of the impact of technological innovations then and now. There are just as many major developments now -- if not more -- than were ever realized during this period, though they may be tangibly must less significant.

    Sure, we had L-1011 TriStars back then, but today we have super-efficient LED lightbulbs, instant access to the world's collective knowledge, and inexpensive instantaneous communications globally, which has literally transformed how people interact familiarly, socially, and commercially. Heck, we now even have the recoverable and reusable spacecraft that were merely sci-fi speculations in the '50's and '60's. None of these innovations can be discounted as being diminished in the face of the achievements wrought during the Golden Quarter.

    I am a child of the '60's, and I was there and absorbing the wonders of the world as they unfolded during that (truly) Golden Quarter. The Golden Quarter transformed me into what I am (and aspire to be) today, and I am truly grateful for having had the opportunity to live in that age of enlightenment. However, I also fully appreciate the absolutely massive innovations and developments of the past twenty years, up to and including the under-appreciated impact that something like LED lighting will have on this planet in years to come.

    So, let's reflect and pay homage to that incredible time. But, as a species, let's look forward to the massive innovation to come as we prepare to leave this planet on mankind's next grand journey.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I wish I shared your optimism. I see that NASA's new Orion launched today. Fantastic. But it will not take people into space for at least seven years and it will be the mid-late 2020s until it is capable of doing what Apollo did 45 years ago. That is not impressive progress.

      • Your Pedantic Father

        Oh, make no mistake, I absolutely and completely agree with you. I find it terribly sad that the U.S. has relinquished the last forty years of spacefaring leadership only to have to claw back to a "me too" position with Orion. However, when I see the superb work being conducted by SpaceX (and FireFly, et al), as well as the incredible progress made by missions such as Cassini, Rosetta, Curiosity, Spirit/Opportunity, et al, I see that we, as a species, have truly made some amazing progress forward.

        These recent innovations may not have been as comparatively impressive as what was performed in the Golden Quarter (the benchmarks were pretty low at at time, thus making the achievements during that period even more impressive), but they are substantial innovations nonetheless.

        I am an outspoken supporter of NASA and their mission, despite my criticisms of their somewhat unambitious leadership over the past (and even poorer funding and exceptionally apathetic leadership from the U.S. Congress). But, you are right; Orion is, in many ways, too little and too late, and symptomatic of all that is wrong with state-based space programs today.

        That being said, when I see the innovations coming out of Musk's team at SpaceX, I get the same warm and tingly butterflies that I did when I watched the Apollo 11 mission live on TV, from beginning to end, back in those halcyon days of 1969.

  • Lance Sjogren

    We have picked the low hanging fruit. The problems that need to be solved for the further betterment of mankind are far tougher than what we have solved up to now.

  • Rebecca Armstrong

    Perhaps you have put your finger on it with your mention of risk aversion.

    As you say, the "Golden Quarter" was the origin of a lot of social movements, from feminism to LGBT rights, the civil rights movement, counterculture, etc. Of course, social movements take many decades to manifest, and I'd venture to say that today we are living in the society that resulted from those movements.

    While the societal benefits are clear enough - getting rid of discrimination and prejudice are good things - it seems to have also resulted in a generally milder, more risk-averse society with a greater emphasis on not offending people. We spend much time and resources and emotion and political capital on social injustices, real or perceived. In politics, in science, in everyday life, playing it safe seems like the most appealing option. We have to guard our words lest a moment's inattention causes the twitterverse to explode with accusations and recrimination. Many ideas simply cannot be expressed anymore, because the societal cost of expressing them is too high.

    I think our world has shrunk considerably, and I don't just mean distance-wise. Our horizons and expectations have shrunk. It's kind of a contradiction in that as more and more knowledge becomes freely available to the masses, people's ambitions seem to contract.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I think that of all the possible explanations I give in my piece, risk-aversion may be the most powerful factor hindering innovation.

    • Darren LB

      That time period wasn't the origin of the feminist movement.

  • Michael Hanlon

    Not as much as it should, is my point. No one is denying progress - the Internet etc - but it just aint what it used to be.

  • Nathan

    Great article, overall.

    However, the brushing off of nuclear catastrophes like Chernobyl as non-disasters is absurd. Will anyone ever inhabit Chernobyl again? Or Fukushima, for that matter? As far as I understand, the answer is no.

    People's opposition to fundamentally dangerous technologies, including nuclear power and genetic tinkering, is rooted in the belief that these technologies have the potential to cause harm beyond our wildest imaginations. We cannot predict what the long-term outcome of introducing GMO to natural habitats will be. We do know, however, that losing control of nuclear power - military or civilian - leads to horrors that we cannot repair.

    If innovation has to slow in some respects in order for us to better understand the risks associated with a new technology, I think that most people would be willing to accept that trade-off. Our new, risk-averse approach to innovation may in some ways be an innovation in and of itself: a careful approach to technologies that could have incredibly beneficial - or incredibly devastating - results for our species.

    • Michael Hanlon

      People are already inhabiting Chernobyl. And Fukushima, like TMI, killed NO ONE ...

  • http://www.kacweb.com/writing.html Kenny Chaffin

    I'm very disappointed in this article, while a reasonable summary of the mid century it really doesn't address the question of stalled progress. Unless it is all being attributed to the income disparity. I really don't feel the headline was addressed. I feel bait and switched. :(

    • Michael Hanlon

      No. I gave three reasons - inequality, stagnant capitalism and risk-aversion. I think the last of these is probably the most important.

      • oneproudbrowncoat .

        Truthfully, I suspect those three reasons are linked; perhaps even different facets of a concept I don't know a word for. Take the "flying cars" idea:

        In film, when we see a metropolis with "flight lanes" between huge arcologies, mishaps are always neat (a vehicle that fails in midair always narrowly misses the 'lane' below and adjacent, nudges off-course or 'maneuverability deficits' always result in a white-knuckle emergency landing). Contrast this with the effects one sees in a mishap on a major highway- traffic slowed by a factor of 4, multiple-vehicle pileups- and then imagine the same with two axes of vector change (that is, movement in three dimensions rather than two).

        No one would do it. Mid-air collisions would perhaps be less likely (that's a concept I'd like to see modeled), but the dangers would be likely be greater since flight requires greater speed; the ability to make a vehicle safer in collisions/crashes that's still the size of an automobile is simply not within our level of technology.

  • OneAverageBear

    This article is poppycock. Poverty and malnutrition are plummeting around the world. Violence is on a steep decline, both in the United States and outside. Life expectancy is up in most of the world. People report being happier (for what that's worth). Healthcare is getting cheaper (slowly). We just landed an unmanned probe on a comet.

    During the Bush years we saw a lot of things stand still in the United States due to bad policies, two illegal wars and two economic crashes. This has led to rising inequality, which has caused some problems - ones we really do need to address. Even so, these last three decades have been the definition of progress.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I made it clear in the final third of the article that things ARE getting better, violence decreasing, poverty reducing etc. Maybe this alone means we shouldn't care too much about stagnation in innovation. But remember that there are going to be an extra two billion mouths to feed, probably (hopefully) in my lifetime, so we are going to need some innovation PDQ to avoid disaster.

  • Darren LB

    You've overlooked one simple factor - the death of a lot of the 'old guard' followed by a huge population growth (which meant that there was a powerful youth culture in the 60s). Couple that with the fact that the development of tech/economy by that point in time meant people were more likely engaged in intellectual work rather than farming/factory work.

    Also, for someone so usually level-headed and skeptical I find it perplexing how you appear to have bought into the whole feminist-movement myth. Firstly, feminist movements didn't originate in that period, or even first 'flower' then. Secondly, you are conflating the feminist movement with technological progress. Why? Unless you actually realise that it was techno-progress (e.g. the pill, domestic appliances, and the growth of white-collar work) that actually drove changes in women's lives, not a bunch of feminists. Why bother being skeptical about science claims but then buy without question social science ones? Lastly, in an article that addresses the 2nd world war (in which millions of ordinary men gave their lives, or were crippled) and the fact that men risked their lives and often died to push big technological projects forward, its strange that you choose to bang on about how bad women had it.

  • chicago9

    The whole article is hogwash. Apparently the author stopped seeing innovation circa 1970. For example anyone who thinks that Google is not major beneficial change is blind. Darpanet did not automatically yield Google. Artificial intelligence components are on their way, even if self awareness is still out of sight.

  • Chillbrah

    Brah, if this were written in 1970 this clusterfuck of rambling masturbation would not have been published by anyone.

  • BobPA

    That explosion of game-changing inventions was because we finally figured out how to harness electrons starting around 1900. The obvious uses were figured out right away, leaving us today at the "what else can we do with this?" stage.

  • JoeS54

    Economic prosperity produces cultural decadence, which produces economic decline.

    Economic prosperity is the prerequisite for technological progress.

  • Sicarium

    What a load of unadulterated BS...

    • Michael Hanlon

      and your actual argument is ...?

      • Sicarium

        To be honest, if you can't recognize the problems with this article for yourself, explaining would be a waste of time.

        • Michael Hanlon

          To be honest, I think you are the person wasting your time here my friend.

          • Sicarium

            I'm not your friend and I'm not particularly concerned with what you think.

  • https://translate.google.com/#ja/en/ラゴン Nathan Gantz

    The extent to which aspiration and inequality generate a feedback loop is overlooked. Thanks for weaving this and other insights together so well.

  • Brian Hruska

    What you miss is that in the last ten years, all the knowledge of mankind is available to nearly any person on the earth with a $100 cell phone. This is monumental.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Yes it is, and I make it clear that modern IT and comms technology is a hugely impressive achievement. But it stands alone. Back in the 1960s innovations were coming thick and fast from all directions. Think about this: compare an average family car made in 1945 with one made in 1971. The newer car would be massively faster, safer, more reliable and more comfortable. Cars in 1945 had no power steering, terrible brakes, often no heating, useless tyres and engines that had to be rebuilt every 10,000 miles. Cars in 1971 were none of those things.
      Now compare a car made in 2015 with a car made in 1990. A few incremental improvements for sure, but nothing spectacular.

      • Brian Hruska

        I completely disagree. Today's cars are absolutely amazing by comparison. For $25k you can get a car that gets 40+ MPG and will last 150,000 miles, has complete airbags, etc. I just bought a Jeep Trailhawk for less that 40K that is literally loaded with spaceage technology. Compare that to the 70s and its like the the 70s were the stone ages.

  • Stephen Paul King

    Market saturation.

  • seanmft

    There are several problems with the logic in this article.

    Hanlon never makes clear exactly what his measure of progress is. It's stated in this article that the world is ~three times richer than it was in 1970, but for some reason this isn't interpreted as progress, but instead as a sign that we should be making more 'progress'.

    The article conflates social, scientific, technological, infrastructural, and economic progress, arbitrarily measuring each against the other. By way of example: The foundations of modern aeronautics go back to the 18th century. The first glider invented in the 19th century. The first manned flight at the beginning of the 20th century. The top speed record for an aerial vehicle was set in 2010. According to the DOT there were over 1.4 billion Available-Seat Miles in 2013 (the highest year on record), but in 1970 that figure was under 18 million!!! So is the age of the airplane the 18th, 19th, 20th or the 21st century? If you haven't figured that out, then you haven't figured anything out. You have no basis for measuring progress, so none of your conclusions can be meaningful.

    The entire premise of the problem, let alone the conclusion of its cause, is so ill defined that by the time we reach the last paragraph we receive the lamest of pronouncements "but it could have been much better". Anything could have been much better, with hindsight.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I am not denying progress. But it HAS slowed, quite dramatically. There are ways of quantifying this, which I point out, such as the time it takes new drugs to gain FDA approval, drawing-board-to-first-flight times for new aircraft designs and so forth.

  • Bill Catz

    I was lucky to be an innovator and inventor during the gold rush of technology. I saw it die for various reasons. The first was the style of management that forbid going outside the box for any reason. Sharing knowledge became a sin. The shift to short term profits over long term vision certainly was a factor as well. We had freedom in the 70s and 80s to just see what we could do. Today, everything is micromanaged, budgeted, program managed and absolutely constrained. Much of what enabled us to create in the past is today illegal or will get you into legal trouble today. Few companies really do encourage creativity and innovation today. I abandoned the system after being refused to improve our world and seeing most of my creative works going into filing cabinets never to be seen again due to middle management politics. The bean counters killed it and, they pat themselves on the back for doing so.

    • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

      There's a great movie from the 1950s called Executive Suits, starring William Holden and Frederic March that deals precisely with this dialogue between the R&D guy with the vision for the future and the dour bean-counter with his eyes on controls. There's a lot of fine dialogue around their respective points of view. In the movie, R&D wins; in real life, not so much. If the movie were ever to be re-made today, Holden the engineer would be out on his ear and March the finance guy would be the CEO feted on Wall Street.

  • Michael Garfield

    Brilliant.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Thank you!

  • MNJAM

    "Most of what has happened since has been merely incremental
    improvements upon what came before. That true age of innovation – I’ll
    call it the Golden Quarter – ran from approximately 1945 to 1971."

    Actually, the true age of innovation was 1850-1950, a second century of genius. Everything since 1950 has been "merely incremental improvements upon what came before."

    Basically, we've gotten complacent and stupid. But it probably won't be permanent.

  • http://www.kimkorte.de Kim Korte

    So what about GPS, hybrid cars, 3D cinema, quantum computers, hovercraft skateboards, 3D printing, personal drones, femto-photography, quantom cryptography or carbon nano tubes, to only list a few.

    I am more than looking forward to artifical immune systems, biomass-to-liquid biofuel, climate engineering, exo-sceletons, stratospheric platforms, e-enabled aircrafts, chemical robots, liquid armour, personal air vehicles, smart textiles, automated human behaviour analysis, etc.

    Sure, you could see those as increments of the innovation of electronics and chemistry but then again, those lead back to the innovation of tools and forging.

    • Michael Hanlon

      GPS? impressive. Hybrid cars? A technological dead-end. 3D Cinema? invented in the 1930s. 3D Printing? We shall see if it lives up to the hype. Hovercraft skateboards? They do not exist save in spoof YouTube videos. Personal drones? Fun and clever but not game-changers. I'm looking forward to all the stuff you are looking forward too, but I am not holding my breath.

    • Bill Catz

      The GPS project was developed in 1973. The first electric cars appeared in the 1880s. 3D imaging and stereoscopic was around in the early 1900s. Today's great achievements are just extensions of the past developments and invention.

  • Andreas Mertens

    Progress today comes in silent steps ... but serious steps. Unnoticed by most of
    the public a few weeks ago the first 3D printed heart (of a mouse),
    coverd with stem cells came to live .. ready for implant. A year ago the
    first artificial human oesophagus created in the same way was impanted.
    Todays silent inventions are for sure as important as the invention of
    book printing 500 years ago .. only way faster. When Gutenberg invented
    his printing machine it needed 50 to 100 years before people realized
    the impact his technology. And it turned the world upside down. Without
    Johannes Gutenberg no Martin Luther => no reformation => no age of
    enlightenment => no french revolution => no industrialisation
    etc. Nanotechnology + stem cell technology + 3D printing + robotics +
    cybernetics +Internet come all together ... and each of them is a a huge
    step. Today they are rocketing our steps. They come as silent along the
    way as the book printing. Here a more psoitive view on our future

    https://www.ted.com/playlists/144/should_we_redesign_humans

  • Brad

    Superb, excellent, insightful article!

    "The human genome was decoded (one post-Golden Quarter triumph) nearly 15 years ago and we’re still waiting to see the benefits that, at the time, were confidently asserted to be ‘a decade away’. "

    This is a perfect example of your further statement that "today’s hyper-conformist youth is more interested in the policing of language and stifling debate when it counters the prevailing wisdom. Forty years ago a burgeoning media allowed dissent to flower. Today’s very different social media seems, despite democratic appearances, to be enforcing a climate of timidity and encouraging groupthink."

    For example, groupthink first strongly resisted the decoding of the genome and then more strongly resisted the exploration of the genome for genetic intelligence factors.
    Although we have empirically observed such factors in action for centuries and are at the threshold of pinning them down genetically, the resistance grows stronger.

    This groupthink intimidating opposition to possibly unpleasant scientific findings seems to be, at least in part, the reason for stalled innovation,

  • Andygsept

    There's also the fact that the likes of natural gas. and coal are still relatively low cost energy sources so many countries aren't bothered switching to nuclear just yet.
    Some of the Small Modular reactors designs might change the economics of nuclear plants in that they would be lower maintenance designs, and would allow incremental construction, with returns on investment during the construction period, as well as load following capability and some redundancy.
    Hydro is still typically the cheapest source of electricity,.. however unlike the earlier half of the 20th century it's no longer remotely sufficient to meet our needs.

  • DavidDG

    I enjoyed the article as a racy read, The difficulty I surmise from some of the well-thought out feedback is the strategy of making narrative fit together, which can sometimes be at odds with empirical-based writings supported by citations.

    It's more commonly observed in academia. That's not to say journalism can't be that rigorous or academic. Of course it can, but journalism's grand narrative sans exemplar attributions can attract arrows.

    Furthermore, grand narratives will always be problematic when written from any perspective. They are after all social constructs. What gets left in or out, what isn't explained or framed because it was not required by the author, or that a representation of 'facts' must themselves be spelt out can be contentious and hamper the author's phenomenological flow.

    Carolyn Marvin's 'When Old Technologies Were New: Thinking about
    electric communication in the late nineteenth century', and Mike Conway's 'The Visualizers: A reassessment of Television's News Pioneers' pretty much sums up an added reason why documenting technology can be problematic.

    Conway says, influenced by Marvin that: 'Focusing attention only after people start relying on a medium misses the critical era in its development. By the time an audience has gathered around a source, many of the negotiations over purpose and mission are complete. Routines have already been developed. Limits have already been set. A “hard pattern” of processes and purposes might already be guiding the product'.

  • apeon

    WHAT INNOVATION-PROGRESS?!--as a grade schooler in Blaine, WA-USA, in the 50's I could pick up ANY telephone in town, not identify myself, and ask to talk to Mom-----and I was immediately connected to her, wherever she was.......technology is impersonal, so where is the PROGRESS

  • SmilingAhab

    Things that are government-funded tend to err towards fulfilling what is possible, rather than what is profitable. This is why capital tends to be conservative - incriments are controllable, and markets shapeable. Risk of capital loss is eliminated. But companies have invested simply to see what could be done and have done great good, and our government has done much to coddle and cater to the interests of capital and profitability, which has resulted in things like regulatory capture and the incestuous relationship between Wall Street, K Street, and the Hill. It also produces an arrogance of superiority and disdain, like the attitude seen in Jeff Bezos, Steve Jobs, Lloyd Blankfein, Hugh Grant, and so many others. An attitude common in the aristocracy.

    There is a need for plateaus - like the Amish, we need periods of introspection in order to more wisely apply the fruits of golden ages, lest all the benefits go to the rich and the unforseen consequences of technological innovation spiral out of control. Things CAN go horrifically wrong when long term effects are not known look at CFCs. They were a stupendous, marvelous innovation that pushed perssurized mechanics forward, and burned a hole in our atmosphere that will take centuries to close up. And it wouldn't have happened had we asked. It's the same with GM crops - a lot of traits are selected entirely because of market-making and the oligopolization of the grain market under a few biotech companies; golden rice was a rare exception in a field where introducing novel genomes into the Earth's biosphere is done solely to cement regional monopolies through pesticide compatibility and patent law, and further control over farmers' autonomy (and profits). Many governments are throwing out GM technology not only because of public distrust, but because the first thing most biotech companies do is violently flout agricultural, commodities, and patent laws, and bully and lobby to make a barony of that nation's agricultural sector. It's the second reason for quitting farming aside from old age in the western world. Capital would never allow innovation in food science to feed the bottom billion - the bottom billion is hungry precisely because their land is now the massive corporate monoculture farms that feed the West following the Green Revolution. The hungry are there because of unforseen consequences of the Green revolution.

    While it's true that further nuclear infrastructure would have reduced household and business use of petroleum and other hydrocarbon products for energy, it would also have cemented obsolete, wildly expensive, and critically dangerous technology, wherein a period of skepticism has allowed non-nuclear-bomb spinoff technology into the light of consideration, like LFTR and non-uranium nuclear technology.

    I would also like to comment on the whole "social policing" thing: language is a tool that conveys not only meaning, but attitudes and values. Lynchings and the shunning and abuse of single or promiscuous women may be the things of the past, but where the overt is destroyed, it lives on in our language, in our terminology, and in the behaviors of our culture. This is why civil rights, women's rights, and gay rights have moved into the realm of semiotics - it's no less a policing than Black Panthers driving out the KKK, and just as necessary to eliminate the last vestiges of the old ways. And we're far less conformist than the generations of the 50's, 60's, and 70's.

    I can produce, I believe, a definite time and place as the starting point of the re-ascension of capital and conservative attitudes: In 1971, with the Powell Memo to the Chamber of Commerce. It decried public investment and the general attitude that capitalism wasn't perfect (the same decrying about communism that produced the Stasi, by the way), and sounded a call for businesses around the world to turn the WTO and CoC into elite cabals designed to "starve the beast" and make capitalism the only option and the only culture. Capital's inherent conservatism and amorality are the result.

    That's not to say that greed and conflict can't solve problems, but they are a hammer and nail. Communism tried to fix everything by seeing nothing but screwholes and screwdrivers. The dirigiste social democracies seem to have hit a sweet spot, but they too seem susceptible to the vox populi being drowned out or disregarded. Also, just before the Golden Quarter, technology of all kinds was in its infancy. We're dealing with the timescales of civilizations here, not of lives. Have patience.

    And my smartphone battery lasts for 2.5 days, Mike. When I turn off all the metric tracking and advertising network software.

  • https://plus.google.com/+FrankLithiumz/posts Frank Lithium

    Agreed. There has been a lack a leadership on all fronts.

  • windship

    Perhaps the most alarming slowdown in human progress is in the world of nuclear weapons. The only reason we are still here writing comments to articles on the internet is because the military-industrial complex that completely rules the roost hasn't started a nuclear war yet, by mad intention or by sheer stupidity. In a world ruled by obsolete tribal nationalism and whacky religious concepts that ignore science altogether, and amid all the alarming signs of ecological overshoot and accelerating climate change for which we have no authentic techno-fixes, the odds that we will still be here contemplating modernity's fruits by century's end are becoming abysmally low.

  • jhertzli

    We were expecting an energy singularity and we're getting an information singularity instead.

  • http://granitesentry.com Granite Sentry

    It's probably pretty natural for history to move in fits and starts; we may just be in a hiatus period in which the gains of the golden quarter are consolidated and pressed into maximal use. Reaching the diminishing returns point of all that progress may spark the next boom.

    But the writer makes a good point about our new risk averse attitude, which we probably can lay at the feet of two large groups: lawyers, for obvious reasons, and the daily media, which generates a panic atmosphere by constantly trumpeting terrible but largely imaginary catastrophes at the same time that they ballyhoo advances that typically don't pan out. We get tired of hearing it, and it creates a cynical pessimism about progress that tends to undercut the urge to advance.

  • http://energyknot.blogspot.co.uk/ WilliamAshbless

    In their Stanford course 'Startup Engineering', Balaji S. Srinivasan and Vijay Pande explain why all innovation in recent years has been IT and Internet focused [ 140 characters ]. It's very difficult to harm someone, with an Internet startup or computer game, so I'm still allowed to innovate in one sphere. Back in the day when the Wright Brothers discovered how to fly, prototype aircraft crashes and human fatalities were common. If every prototype aircraft had needed a safety permit before being allowed to fly, we'd never have had got off the ground. They give the examples of Samuel Kier, Andrew Carnegie and Eli Lilly, who built their large companies from little but innovation within a few years with tiny capital investments. Today it is impossible in innovate industrially without
    * spending large amounts of capital
    * gaining necessary permits (even this can be expensive!)

    Back in the 1920s, drugs could be invented, patented and shipped within 3 years with little capital outlay. Today it takes decades, billions in capital, and a near encyclopedic knowledge of the regulatory process. At this point some critic of mine is going to say "Thalidomide", but I'd answer that:
    * we discovered the actual problems of Thalidomide relatively early
    * the lost opportunity cost (lives saved and health improved) of deploying drugs early are never weighed against risk. Risk aversion is an absolute prohibition, like Moses commandments. The argument I just made for early drug deployment is politically incorrect, I'm not allowed to say it in polite company. The reason we had no drugs for Ebola was because the regulatory process made it impossible to develop one. Only now that Ebola threatens millions do we drag ourselves out of torpor to up our game a little, but once Ebola has been beat the stupor of regulation will reassert itself.

    "Additionally, collaboration on new rules between large companies and regulators encoded assumptions into law, making certain features mandatory and banning most minimum viable products. The endpoint of industry maturation was that those few potential startups that were not deterred by economic infeasibility were now legally prohibited." - Srinivasan and Pande.

    Some areas are now almost impossible to innovate in (nuclear fission reactors), other areas very difficult (GMOs and drugs). Yesterday we dared to 'ask for more', for progress. Today we comfort ourselves with safety and less.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Interesting. A few people have blamed the greens for the stagnation, but I think that it is probably not as simple; a certain kind of greenery (not all kinds) is very wedded to the precautionary principle, a principle which, if it had been applied at the time, would have meant no fire, no wheel, no steam engines, no farming and certainly no electricity. The problem is, as you say, that regulators never consider the opportunity cost of NOT allowing something risky.

  • anjanson

    I would argue that the problem is not that we have ''banal improvements'' now, as opposed to the ''golden era''... The problem is people who think of these as ''banal improvements'', who are still stuck in the old ''moon bases, nuclear rockets, supersonic jets'' etc. mentality...

    Our current progress has neither slowed, nor stopped... and it's definitely not banal. It's just not ''dumb'' progress like the ''bigger, better, higher, faster'' progress of the mentioned ''golden era''. Current progress in IT is about understanding our world better and creating tools for massive leap/new quality of innovation in future.

    For all the talk about ''golden era'', there were also fields that did not advance back then. Empire State was built in 1931 and its 381m height was not surpassed until World Trade Center in 1972. In 2003 (11 years ago) Petronas Towers were the highest at 452 metres, now after a year or so they will barely hang in top 10... We can also talk about solar power/wind turbine efficiencies...

    I think people don't give much credit to this era, because it is an era of transitio in many ways. The ''golden era'' was possible, because in reality IT WAS THE ERA OF CONSUMPTION. That was the era that created the pollution and global warming threat etc. that we had to curb in following decades to make more economically sensible decisions. But innovation did not go anywhere, especially in IT field. It's just that it is not yet ready for large scale project deployment. But when it will finally be ready, I believe you'll be very surprised.

  • JohnIGottschalk

    We're in a time period where the parts of our brain that get satisfied by agency and action, are sufficiently provided for by posting a comment on an online article.

  • ideblasi

    To me the main and most important point is that we as a society have developed an extreme aversion to risk.

  • Nuno Hipólito

    Humbug

  • Dan Bunbury

    Very interesting article, and correct in many ways. However another very important factor is that companies are now financially incentivised to STOP change, and hedge funds make money by betting on downturn (and large institutions can influence it to make it happen as well). Take cancer or HIV, for example: companies make the most money by keeping us alive but chronically sick - death or a cure is a bad investment. When the public funds the innovation (as the article points out), we get real advances, because we want the full end result which benefits the most, not just the one that lines the pockets of the few.

  • concerned

    I didn't think it was possible, but this writer has proved me wrong.

    You have found ANOTHER way to privilege the Baby Boomers. Its just a way to make them feel special, and to explain away their faults and alienation from our current society. Its what THEIR grandparents used to say about THEIR generation of the the interwar and war years.

    I was almost with you till you started making claims on social change. To say that the period saw great social change is true: to say that this change is special and distinct from that which went before or after is false. Gay rights was just an off-shoot of racial civil rights, which was itself an off-shoot of the first wave of feminism and the abolitionist movement. See what I did there?

    To pretend that the period you speak off is somehow special is to ignore what went on before, and to disparage what went on after. I wonder how those with disabilities, those whose have mental illness, or those who aren't cis-gender, would feel sent back to this time period? Probably not too happy. These are rights movements that have only seen their beginnings in the last decade or so.

    It really is time we moved on from hagiography of the Boomers. They bought, ate, slept with, and did everything:

    "Yes, yes, that's a great story grand-pa. Take your pills, now. I'll see you next Christmas"

    Others can critique your assessment of current innovation (which I see that they have)

  • Lars Clausen

    Robots. GPS. Mobile devices. The Internet. 3D printing. DNA sequencing. Self-driving cars. Voice and image recognition. All things that have happened since the 70ies.

    As for his favorite example: If planes haven't evolved much since then, it's because they've reached a level where the benefits of making them faster are less than the cost - like going 200 rather than 160 on the Autobahn doesn't get you there much faster. Some things just doesn't need to get constantly improved. My hammer isn't significantly better than what they had centuries ago. Is that a problem? Not really.

    Also, a number of the things he credits to the "Golden Quarter" have their roots earlier.

    ... I think I've just been trolled.

  • http://texrat.net/ texrat

    Interesting article. And I'm with the author unless he thinks the drug development slowdown due to increased emphasis on making them safer is a bad thing. Yes I grant the overall benefit of many historically rushed drugs, but I can't put medicines in the same sort of category as, say, macro projects or consumer products. The risk IMO isn't worth it in this case.

    • Michael Hanlon

      The problem is no one ever does a risk-analysis of inaction. Not doing stuff that we know how to do that will almost certainly be beneficial can be far more dangerous than doing risky stuff.

      • http://texrat.net/ texrat

        As history has shown, even recently, many well-intended drugs have severe and even fatal side effects. You and the author may be willing to saddle a percentage of the public with such harm by reduced testing; I'm not.

        • Michael Hanlon

          It depends, surely, on the likelihood of harm and the balance of risks.

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            Of course. And the author cavalierly dismisses known risks.

          • Michael Hanlon

            No I do not. Known risks cannot be dismissed. But the fact that it is now so expensive and time consuming to monetise a new drug discovery is holding back the Pace of medical advance. Even if you can get past the regulatory hurdles there are still the lawyers to worry about.

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            "In the 1960s, new medicines were rushed to market. Not all of them worked and a few (thalidomide) had disastrous consequences. But the overall result was a medical boom that brought huge benefits to millions. Today, this is impossible."

            Ask the people suffering defects due to thalidomide if the risk was worth it. I'm sure they're thrilled for those unnamed millions.

          • Michael Hanlon

            That is an illogical argument. 'Ask the parents of the children who had an adverse reaction to the smallpox vaccine and see if they were thrilled for the tens of unnamed millions who lived'.

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            It isn't illogical at all. Your position on victims of drug mishaps is, however, is very callous.

          • Michael Hanlon

            Why is it callous? Drugs can kill people. Surgery can kill people. Not all medicine works all the time. But that is not a reason to stop trying to find new medicines. Coal mining kills people - so are you happy to do without electricity?

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            How interesting that you accuse me of using bad logic and then engage in logical fallacies such as straw men. Read carefully through my posts: I never said we should "stop trying to find new medicines".

            I don't support extremes one way or the other. I just want robust protocols for drug testing that errs toward proving safe efficacy over a rush to market.

            Overall your article is thought-provoking and you make many valid points. But your willingness to succumb to logical fallacies in an argument with a reader who takes exception to one part works against you.

          • oneproudbrowncoat .

            Put as such, I'd take a drug that was "rushed to market"- even if it might kill me- to prevent something I *knew* would kill me.

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            That's a very unique situation and not relevant to what I'm talking about.

          • oneproudbrowncoat .

            Irrelevant how? The argument is whether the possibility of risk outweighs the certainty of risk.

          • http://texrat.net/ texrat

            Irrelevant to any point *I* was making.
            I'm okay with making untested or experimental drugs available to someone with a fatal illness... but that's very different from mainstream development, which was my issue.

  • itellu3times

    Author is simply unaware of current technologies and is incurably nostalgic for culture as it was in 1971. I'm of a certain age myself and sympathize, but objectively there's just no argument.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I am afraid I am all to aware of current technologies (although I do not pretend to understand all of them). They are impressive, but not as impressive as they ought to be. An automobile made today is only about twice as fuel efficient as one made in 1971. That is pretty shocking when you think about it. As for nostalgia, I was six in 1971 so it cannot be that.

      • oneproudbrowncoat .

        The widespread use of CT, MRI, and doppler ultrasound began in the '80s, though. Fairly significant advances.

  • Michael Hanlon

    Excellent points. Maybe personal computers just don't need to be any faster.

  • JAhootz

    It is no coincidence that the last few decades of your Golden Quarter saw first an explosion of scientific study into psychedelics (thousands of papers published), and later a huge boom in the use of psychedelics by millions of regular people all over the world. It is obvious to me that there is a direct link between the war on psychedelics and other drugs and the stagnation in world changing innovation.

    That said, I don't see it as pessimistically as the author. There have indeed been world changing innovations since the 70's, such as sequencing the human DNA and 3D printing technology, to name a few.

  • JAhootz

    It is no coincidence that the last few decades of your Golden Quarter saw first an explosion of scientific study into psychedelics (thousands of papers published), and later a huge boom in the use of psychedelics by millions of regular people all over the world. It is obvious to me that there is a direct link between the war on psychedelics and other drugs and the stagnation in world changing innovation.

    Not only do psychedelics have a direct and powerful impact on creativity, but they can also powerfully shift our perspective on risk taking.

    • Michael Hanlon

      It may be obvious to you but not to me. Correlation does not imply causation. Many of the innovations took place in countries where psychedelics never really took off. And the start of the Golden Quarter - the late 1940s - was not a psychedelic era.

      • JAhootz

        Correlation of course doesn't imply causation, as it doesn't for any of the theories you presented. You make some good points and I agree with the general thrust of the piece. I wasn't intending to say that psychedelics and plant medicines were the sole cause of innovation in that period, only that they played a key role that went unacknowledged in your piece.

        • Michael Hanlon

          I am certainly not ruling anything out!

  • Michael Hanlon

    Nuclear power is not perfect, but it is a necessary evil, even in its current form. If continuing investment into nuclear technology had been made we would now be looking at a new era of modular reactors and, perhaps, thorium plants that solve many of the problems seen in the early years.
    It wasn't 'Soviet Propaganda' that tallied the Chernobyl deaths; it was the WHO. There is no evidence that Chernobyl radiation caused any birth defects. As to Fukushima, it is now well known that no one died. A few may, in decades to come, die early as a result of the radiation. But we tend to forget the seventeen THOUSAND killed by the tsunamis themselves.

    • oneproudbrowncoat .

      For argument's sake, would you mind presenting that source so the trolls will have less ammunition? Thanks...

  • Egyptsteve

    Mid 1970s: the beginning of Conservative backlash against the social progress that marked the post-World War II period. Tax rebellion led to massive disinvestment in public goods. The co-option of the government by corporations led to the destruction of unions, outsourcing, and the ruin of the Middle Class. Conservatives revolted en mass against science and technology -- anything that smacked of that thar book-learnin. In other words, blame everything on Ronald Reagan, and you won't be far wrong at all.

    • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

      Reagan was just a tool; better to blame the forces behind him who waved him around in front of the people as a focus for an undercurrent of social unease. There are powerful groups in our society who have a vested interest in paralyzing government, particularly the Federal government, in order to facilitate their ongoing corruption and looting of the public at all levels. One doesn't need to postulate an overarching conspiracy; there are enough small conspiracies spread all around to account for our constant state of low-level chaos, occasionally mobilized into something larger in order to scare everyone.

  • Michael Hanlon

    Yes, probably. If by progress you mean lifting the absolute-poor out of their poverty then bring it on, I say. The human population is now too large to be sustainable without some pretty serious technology. And that population is growing. I do not define progress (just) by Moon bases and robot butlers, but by defeating tropical diseases and providing decent and cheap food and clean water to the bottom billion.

  • Michael Hanlon

    Fukushima is a splendid advertisement for the safety of nuclear power. A crappy old nuke, badly run, poorly designed and with a myriad flaws gets hit by one of the biggest earthquakes in recorded history THEN a series of 100-foot waves ... and NO ONE DIES.

  • Michael Hanlon

    I have, many times. Most of what people 'know' about Chernobyl is pure myth. If you can point to the 'thousands' that have died, show me the death records and so forth, let me know.

  • Michael Hanlon

    No cigar I am afraid. No one has (yet) managed to come up with a watertight theory of quantum gravity.

  • dixon757

    The long arm of government is another splash of cold water in our Brave New World. Diverting research funding into political process means a much less vibrant leading edge. Now smart people chase grant funding rather than independent research. Government is used by large insider corporations and unions to suppress upstart innovaters. Choice educational and employment opportunities tend to go to satisfy gender and racial quotas rather than ability and merit (except in China, Korea, Japan, etc). Actually the federal government lacks constitutional authority for most of this idiocy, but the ruling oligarchy still rules.

  • ChristopherHalbersma

    Maybe you don't understand information technology but it's a paradigm change in knowledge. It's like complaining that there's nothing good happens in science because Alchemy hasn't advanced in 400 years.

  • Noibn48

    Taking elderly poverty from 33% to about 10% by 1970 isn't progress? Do tell.

    Defense spending did give us pens that write underwater and in zero gravity. And the billion spent on an atomic powered bomber has had great benefits for all Americans. Spent a train load of money (and 58K American lives) on Vietnam with its easy-to-jam M-16s. How did that work out?

    Now we're going to build 2400 F-35s to ward off the USSR and its Warsaw Pact, estimated at USD 1 trillion to build and maintain, all the while the costs go up and the specs go down. Meantime, our infrastructure is a national disgrace.

    • Russel aka ‘Rusty’ Shackleford

      The M-16 was privately developed by the Armalite corporation and it's current descendants are considered some of the finest rifles in current use, almost every SF unit in the free world choses some M-4 variant.

      • Noibn48

        You're correct about the weapon...today. In the Vietnam days it was unreliable. At least the AK-47, despite its range and accuracy limitations, didn't jam.

    • mreport

      _Technological_ progress only, Noibn48,
      and even then you have to cherry-pick and
      add your own emotional evaluations to get
      a negative evaluation.

      • Noibn48

        The poster was, IMO, intimating that without all that non-defense spending we'd have even more "progress". Ergo, all that non-defense spending he listed was a waste (some of it probably was).

        Dropping that elderly poverty level is a huge piece of progress, one that you, 46, and myself (48) benefit from. (My earliest memory is steam engines)

        The incredibly blown defense spending on Vietnam is hardly cherry picking considering THOSE consequences. The atomic airplane of the 1950s is just the tip of the iceberg of the DOD follies and waste. Even trying to kill the A-10 in favor of more gee whiz aircraft was a waste.

        Sure DARPA eventually gave us the internet, but the transistor, maybe the greatest invention since printing, was the key and I believe that was privately developed.

        Grateful? Nah. Amazed? Yep. But all that technological progress has had its own consequences and you and I can both name them.

        • mreport

          I worked in the Military Industrial Complex;
          I know about wasteful government spending.

          The atomic airplane design study produced valuable
          negative knowledge about compact nuclear power plants;
          'This won't work' often points to 'This can work'.

          The transistor was invented at Bell Labs, based on WWII
          military research. The Integrated Circuit was invented by
          several people for military electronics applications.

          The microprocessor was invented by Intel for commercial
          applications: Calculators, 'smart' appliances, etc; Nobody
          had the least suspicion that Moore's Law would explode
          into reality and transform all aspects of life as it did.

          Vietnam was FUBAR from the get-go, but worth it.
          It was so sad to see the victory thrown away.

          Were it not for surgical magic and Medicare funding
          I would be dead now. This is a benefit to me, but is it,
          or the rest of the spending on seniors, a benefit to
          society as a whole ?

          • Noibn48

            IMO, the transistor is the most important technological invention after printing.

            How was Vietnam "worth it"? And what "victory"?

          • Tara Connor

            it was not a victory; i knew and talked to a lot of guys who came back, it was a waste of blood.

          • Noibn48

            How was Vietnam "worth it"? And what "victory"?

          • M. Report

            People like you, who pretend ignorance of established facts
            and demand detailed proof (to be judged by yourself and
            found wanting) of those facts, tire me. Anybody who wants
            those answers can find them by searching the web on
            'Vietnam Victory' and spending a few minutes reading.

          • Noibn48

            The devil is ALWAYS in the details. I was merely asking for a cogent argument to go with your statements.

            A BA History aside, I have read extensively about America's involvement with that country, 1945-1975. throughout my adult life. So I'm pretty sure I have my facts in order.

            I actually supported the Vietnam policy until late 1967. Even enlisted earlier that year but flunked the physical. Then I read some...wait for it...history; history of Vietnam and history of American dissent over her entering foreign wars.

            That you choose to bloviate and literally sneer at the details rather make make that cogent argument I was expecting speaks volumes about "people like you". .

            Worth it? Tell that tot he American and Vietnamese dead and wounded. Victory? I'll ask the same question I've been asking for almost 50 years: Win what?

          • Tara Connor

            i am a senior on social security,& medicare,and I saw Pres. Obama pass laws to take 700 billion dollars out of Medicare,within ten years.THIS IS HAPPENING.I am not voting for a democrat again;and, all those 19-yr,olds, who fought the Vietnam war, and all came back in body-bags, would not see Vietnam as a "victory", it was failure.NO,I am for Medicare and Soc. sec., and against Obamacare, which is sucking medicare dry.I do NOT WANTA A DEMOCRAT in office, they are not better than republicans now.I agree,since all the upper-rich have all the money,that explains all the poor.MORE RICHER-RICH, IS FAILURE.WE HAVE A DICTATORSHIP OF THE RICH,NOT A DEMOCRACY.that's got a lot to do with it.

          • Noibn48

            First of the 700 billion, is a dubious factoid. Neither you nor I have seen cuts to our basic services.

            I'll even provide you with a source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2012/10/03/fact-check-the-700b-medicare-cut/

            What the GOP is proposing is changing Medicare into a voucher system and letting the insurance companies hold total sway. A coupon and privatization scheme that will not come close to covering not-wealthy seniors the way Medicare does now. Check it out.

            So vote GOP and your children and grandchildren will curse your name for supporting their destruction of Medicare as you and I know it.

          • Noibn48

            (crickets)

          • Noibn48

            Still waiting for that cogent argument re the whys and wherefores of that war.

          • seamus2

            We lost in Vietnam to a better military force led by better military minds.

          • JV

            That's right we lost in Vietnam and that is why they have better health, world renown hospitals, higher standards of living, the freedom to vote and elect a president, the right to speak their minds publicly. No wonder we Americans illegally migrate to countries like Vietnam, Iran, Venezuela, Cuba and many others.....
            O'h my, oops is all the other way around because America is the Best.

          • seamus2

            America is the best at what? Spending trillions of dollars on losing wars?
            Creating greater income inequality and less opportunity than any other developed country on earth?
            Ranking 27th in child mortality?
            Denying health care to millions of citizens including its veterans?
            Having the number one economy in the world and having 51% of its public school students living in poverty?
            Please take your jingoistic nonsense to a place where people buy your simple minded nonsense.
            And by the way, we've been defeated in Iraq and Afghanistan as well.

          • JV

            over 45 million people that live in the US moved to the US from their country of origin. US has far more immigrants than any other country in the world. These immigrants and the overall vast majority of Americans know how great this country is. There are a few simpletons such as yourself that will whine and complain about everything. These simpletons are never happy, live a frustrated life and they have to blame their problems on someone or something.

            I recommend you become a Christian, as Christian you will be accepted, productive and live a happy life.

          • seamus2

            Actually I've been extremely lucky in this country. Grandson of immigrants with 4th grade educations I am economically just outside the 1% in my state.
            You my friend have proven yourself to be a gullible buffoon with no knowledge of history, economics or political events.
            But your belief in sky fairies will carry you far.

          • Tara Connor

            yes, no one's going to rescue us from our own ballooning, wobbling, massive fed. govt., that's so godzilla-big,and bloated, we can't support it any longer. God will not even rescue the US. Even HE is not that gullible.

          • Tara Connor

            A lot of the Jews here are not too happy about the "new anti-semitism" in all the colleges, it's even in high schools!!

          • Tara Connor

            We are going to fall, way before the Roman Empire fell. i am glad i'm old, so i don't have to see that much of it happen.It will be BAD. Some of the Deep South states are already preparing to leave.Texas could do it now, tech-wise, they have a major oil pipe line the US needs very badly.--but that state can physically do it. they don't need the fed. govt. now.AND they know that.

            All that needs to happen, is severe crisis in the fed. govt. where it's paralyzed, and these entities will or can take the advantage, and LEAVE, and the fed.s can't stop them.. the Civil War was a huge catastrophe, that permanently divided this country. iT was never HEALED. Even we northerners know that. Given a paralyzed Fed,, many states would take the chance, and formally leave.-Lots of us know that. we're not ignorant.

          • cunudiun

            We had all that better stuff BEFORE the damn war too.

          • seamus2

            What exactly is your point? A third world country that suffered under nearly 100 years of French imperialism, Japanese occupation and then a reimposition of French colonialism threw off the oppressive occupation forces of the supreme military force in the world and you think they should have caught up to the US economy in 40 years?
            The fictional world that you and people like you live in thinks that America can simply kill its way to world supremacy and everyone else should be thrilled at the prospect. Every developed country in the world is experiencing immigration from countries that have been ruthlessly exploited by western capitalism and vicious state run economies.
            Try reading some history. You'll be enlightened.

          • Tara Connor

            hey, America was one of the ONLY DEMOCRACIES in the world.Even now,all the countries in the Middle east are dictatorships or run by royalty.THEY keep all their populations poor. the majority of all countries in the world are dictatorships, run by tyranny, royal dictators, or military dictatorships. Communist countries, ditto. WE are not the ONLY problem country, multiply that times by everyone else.--there are NO good guys out there.

          • Tara Connor

            Did you know that whole groups of Amish, who are able, are leaving the US, to return to places like Europe? know why, they said this"We no longer have freedom to live our lives the way we choose,and be able to farm,ranch,raise animals, ect. We can't live in a country that restricts our freedoms."--and they are moving away.The Amish greatly need freedom to live their own lives. THAT is gone from here.

            Also, lots of scientists, medical, technical, specialists in lab biology,all the sciences and larger biological sciences, they have left the USA for many jobs and permanent careers in Asian countries and cities. I know this for a fact.

            Hollywood and film-technicians, film-work people, in all areas of movie making and film production, have left the USA, left Hollywood, to go work in Europe and other countries.PLUS, THOUSANDS of science and technical career-employees have left the USA for jobs in all other countries. Asia is a favorite.

            the careers, business, companies, industries of all these specialists, are not here. they are gone.

            those "migrant illegals" you are so charmed by, are the very least skilled, the very least educated.

            The MOST skilled and educated, have moved, and are leaving here.WE get the "wretched refuse" so listed by the statue of Liberty. AND graduates of high science and tech, schools here, (I was told by college-people) do not work here; they take all their good education back to other countries to live. the majority of good college-science leave the country.

          • Phil J Malloy

            no we lost for the same reason we are losing iraq and afghanistan. political correctness. In war, bad things happen. if victory is the goal, the bad stuff happening is a side effect that can be tolerated. however we no longer do in america, and therefore spend billions to accomplish nothing

          • seamus2

            No, we aren't losing because of political correctness, we're losing because we have an ill defined mission, a complete lack of understanding of the people and culture we have attacked and a world wide reputation as bullies and economic exploiters.
            And treating human lives as "collateral damage" is exactly the attitude that bought us that reputation.

          • Phil J Malloy

            war is ugly. we should not go to war unless as a last resport. and if we go to that resort, all bets are off. heartless? maybe if you ignore the part about it being a last resort

          • seamus2

            Phil, That would be great if war actually was a last resort, but for America it often seems that diplomacy and negotiation are the last resort. In no war should "all bets be off". That's what the Geneva Convention was all about. In a war the military is always the safest place to be. Statistically casualty odds for civilians are anywhere from 10 to a 100 times greater.

          • Tara Connor

            heh heh, i read Ancient Rome almost collapsed early, cause they spent every dime, coin, fighting every other civilization; they stopped doing it, and started to "mediate and compromise-and-stop-warring" and this saved the Empire from collapsing. if they had continued like we are, they would not have lasted such a long time. WE will fall sooner.Count on it.

          • LeightonESmith

            lead plumbing

          • Tara Connor

            TRUE, for example, i invented something, and i want a small company to work with me,to produce it; where do i have to go?NO ONE IN AMERICA wants to make it!they don't want to!! I am forced to go to Asia, China, just to get a small company to make it--willing to make something new!!

            WHY? NO ONE IN AMERICA WANTS TO MAKE ANYTHING NEW.I TRIED to talk to everyone in the field; they only stick to old standards,old stuff, they won't even TRY THE NEW ANYMORE.
            WHY? they want to keep selling the old stuff they make.they are afraid the new will disrupt their time-honored, rigid beliefs about "what works." to them, only the old, standard stuff will work and sell. they are invested in that, no new stuff.

            China and Asia is almost always ready to make something small,new, cheap, that no one else has.they don't care about"rigid and standard." they just wanta try to make money!!but Americans?they're all afraid to DO ANYTHING NEW. AFRAID.--AFRAID TO DO OR TRY. I am sick of the American attitude. we are OLD AND DECAYING here.

          • Tara Connor

            we also lost, and our generals then say this,"we were not allowed to go all out, to win the war." --and i believe that, too, this country's fed.govt. is chicken-s---!! no guts!!

          • LeightonESmith

            Sorry, I'm pretty sure there was a retreat involved.

          • Chris D

            Actually the atomic airplane design produced a very good nuclear power plant design that used Thorium as a fuel source. Unfortunately the design languished because a politician switched funding to an inferior design only because the inferior design was being researched in his political jurisdiction.
            His quest for "Jobs Jobs Jobs" hobbled our electrical generation capabilities and damaged our environment more than any single decision in the later half of the 20th century.
            And today we can't return to the better design because the regulatory agencies don't want to take a chance on something that is very different. Also the regulatory agencies are heavily influenced by companies who wish to keep the status quo. Switching over to the new design would destroy these companies business model.
            I seriously recommend everyone to look up FLiB or LFTR nuclear energy from Thorium. It is a real technology that can produce real results.

    • oneproudbrowncoat .

      "Spent a train load of money (and 58K American lives) on Vietnam with its easy-to-jam M-16s."

      Point of order- that was actually a failure of execution and not the design.

      "Now we're going to build 2400 F-35s to ward off the USSR and its Warsaw
      Pact, estimated at USD 1 trillion to build and maintain, all the while
      the costs go up and the specs go down."

      Correction- to update your post to recent events, NATO is no longer engaged in any conflict with the USSR or the Warsaw Pact; as those entities went extinct in 1991.

      • Noibn48

        Vietnam was BS and lies and confusion from the get go. Deliberate ignorance and hubris as well.

        I was being sarcastic about the hapless and increasingly costly F-35s going up against the USSR. We are indeed in a mindset of building these things against a long gone enemy.

  • Vittorio

    As the average age increases, so does resistance to change. Make those old folfks more dynamic and we'd be halfway to solving this issue.

  • tcement

    Yes, and 20th century "accomplishments" pale in comparison to those of the 19th, so this purported "Golden Quarter" is not so shiny as author pretends. And would 1971 mark the first early retirements of WW II mid-level officer corps. As the Greatest Generation left and boomers took their places, everything started going downhill. WHAT a surprise! Anyone else notice the tiniest bit of Western European/North American-centricity here?

    • Michael Hanlon

      In this period most innovation was a Western phenomenon (quite a bit - physics, space travel - came form the USSR as well). Maybe the next great wave of innovation will come from elsewhere.

  • JDanaH

    As Glen Reynolds notes at Instapundit, the end of this flood of innovation coincides quite closely with the rise of the regulatory/welfare state.

    • Shirley0401

      Maybe so (in terms especially of health/environmental regulation). But isn't that justified, as we've developed a greater-than-ever-before ability for people/organizations to affect/destroy the commons of earth, air, and water that until very recently we had no concept of our ability to affect?

      • georgedixon1

        Glen Reynolds is taking about how it is and came to be.

        You are talking hypotheticals

  • Mastro63

    "When wealth accumulates so spectacularly by doing nothing, there is less impetus to invest in genuine innovation."

    Its a bit more complex than that- as my brother is learning.

    My brother is part owner of a tech company- the other founders are millionaires several times over. He is not.

    The other founders want a home run- something they can brag about- either earth-shattering tech or a huge financial return. My brother would be happy with a profitable company that advances tech- basically singles and doubles over home runs.

    Which would be better for advancing technology? Time will tell- but the moon shot idea might be a bit too sexy- GPS is really not- but it sure is useful.

    • Michael Hanlon

      GPS is pretty sexy. I think neither your brother nor his backers are typical. Much wealth is now concentrated in the hands of of people who don;t even want a home run; in my country you can simply sink it into London high-end real estate and see a 12-20% return. Not bad for doing nothing.

      • nan

        Economic rent has existed all along; it means that measures of wealth are greatly overstated because much is just being recirculated and concentrated. Rent in all its forms is a drag on economies, but I don't know whether it directly suppresses innovation. Large fast economies aren't entirely positive phenomena; we really want them to be accurate depictions of what's really happening.

        Too much or too little money are both bad for new ideas - you do best when you're a little hungry, but not starved (both for money in organisations and calories in brains). Too much money is a main source of risk aversion; as with our diets, we're currently overfed but undernourished.

        I liked the article but the computing parts are a little weak; you can't credit the Internet to anything if you don't include the Bell Labs C/Unix work, and can't have the modern uses of computers without the PARC OOP/UI work. Both of those operated in the manner of clueless patrons for slightly-indulged hacker-types - they had access to the equipment for which they could dream up uses (in part because no one else had yet), but didn't feel like anything was actually at stake so they were free to play jazz.

        The wealth inequality observation applies to large industrial projects but not especially well to software innovation; it's pretty cheap, and more than that it's difficult to say with much horizon when more money will get a better result (the mythical man-month). Again, slightly hungry is usually best.

  • mhjhnsn

    At a very high level of aggregation, the growth of government is a big part of it. Yes, govt can fund research and development, but that is a drop in the bucket compared to the effect of government writ large in favoring the past and present over the unrealized future, of catering to established power and by its conscious and unconscious policies discouraging innovation. Add to that the peculiarities of how Western govts have grown--moving away from infrastructure and hardware and science and towards a welfare and regulatory state that subsidizes non-performance. I am NOT saying the welfare state is bad, overall, or that we shouldn't have it, but it certainly imposes choices including not allocating resources toward technological progress.

    • georgedixon1

      "I am NOT saying the welfare/regulatory state is bad, overall, or that we shouldn't have it,"

      I WOULD, because it is. Federal Poverty maintenance and similar subsidies simply get America more of what is subsidized.

  • georgedixon1

    Liberalism (aka: 'Progressives Against Progress')
    has gone from “I think, therefore I am.”
    to today's Liberal: “I believe – therefore it is.”

    The trajectory of the Liberal Democrat Party, since JFK, highlights why their 1930's Depression era ideas and ideology are not sustainable, nor is "Progressive Liberalism" good for America in the 2nd decade of the 21st century
    From
    JFK: "Go to the Moon in a decade"
    To
    Obama: "you can build a new power plant, but it will bankrupt you"

    From
    JFK: "Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country"
    To
    Obama: "ObamaCare"

    Democrats are devolving...which is fine
    ...except that they are dragging America down with them...which is Not
    Liberalism is not sustainable, even if it worked.
    Obama is frustrated that he is proving it.

    • THEFUNKenSTEIN

      what?

  • Michael Hiteshew

    Shorter answer: The spoiled, cowardly, craven, power hungry, tyrannical, pathologically lying Baby Boomers took over society.

    • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

      Gee golly, I certainly do apologize for having been born when I was (although, in fairness) I really wasn't consulted about the date). When do you think that the enraged mob of Gen Xers and Millennials will come and escort me to the nearest lamppost? Or ought I just to off myself quietly first? I'd hate to deprive the public of their fun, though, since all the ills of contemporary society can obviously be laid at my particular doorstep.

  • georgedixon1

    Google the 'Golden Age of Rome' and see a similar complacent, non-innovative decadence like you describe so aptly

  • Babylonandon

    Two types of people rule everything here: unfettered lawyers and activist journalists.

    Once they were able to rape the economy of private creation thru lawsuits AND create the political environment for massive bureaucracies to protect the public from private company products ... our progress was doomed. The more money funneled into lawyers and mass media, the more they killed people's desire to take risk in ANY aspect of adventure save the personal feel of taking risks with your own body.

    Killing yourself jumping off a building - cool. Building a widget that has a defect that hurts somebody makes you a monster. Better to take up a career as a crusader for public safety or being a legal pirate than to become a walking target for a lawsuit or an expose on 60 minutes.

    There has never been real public push for TORT reform or any sort of liability for journalistic malpractice. The lawyers and journalists back each other up to make sure there isn't any of either.

  • Kim Du Toit

    The author has actually answered his own question; the Boeing 747 took 5 years to fly, the Airbus 380 took 15. Let's see: what could possibly have changed to make it take so long? Oh, wait a minute: could it be that the tenfold increase in government regulation was a factor, along with the huge increase in tort penalties which didn't exist prior to 1971? Or maybe it was the fact that the advanced technological features in the 380 make the original 747 look like a WWI biplane? Or the fact that Airbus is controlled by three different governments, while Boeing is a private corporation?

    There's more, much more; but I have to go and put lard on the cat's boil now. That's more rewarding than picking apart facile drivel.like this article.

    • Michael Hanlon

      You make some good points then you ruin your argument with childish abuse. I don't understand people like you.

  • dwpittelli

    Perhaps progress has slowed since 1970, but this article makes some odd claims to support that contention:

    “As success comes to be defined by the amount of money one can generate in the very short term, progress is in turn defined not by making things better, but by rendering them obsolete as rapidly as possible”

    -- Rather the same thing. You make a product obsolete by inventing a better one.

    "In particular, when share prices are almost entirely dependent on growth (as opposed to market share or profit)”

    -- The “growth” which share prices depend upon typically means growth in market share or profit.

    “In the 1960s, venture capital was willing to take risks, particularly in the emerging electronic technologies. Now it is more conservative, funding start-ups that offer incremental improvements on what has gone before.”

    -- And yet somehow Moore’s law persists, with computers improving at the same rate as in the 1960s.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I'll reply to all these points.
      1) There is a difference between planned obsolescence and innovation. Cars in 1960 were better than cars in 1950 because of the latter. I am not so sure that still holds, if you compare 2005 and 2015.
      2) Growth can mean many things, including market share. It is the speed of growth that matters most these days, not so much absolute market share (or even absolute growth).
      3) Moore's Law (actually an observation) is a separate issue to this. It does not really hold any more in any case when it comes to consumer IT.

  • wGraves

    The fundamental problem interfering with the exploration of space is cost to orbit. Remember the 1950's Hollywood conception of 'rocket ships.' They landed on their tails and the vehicles were reused. The problem is, it takes a fast processor to balance a ship on it's thruster and there weren't any of those in 1950 which would fit in a small space. Enter Elon Musk. This week, SpaceX will try the first landing of a reusable booster from an actual mission. It may fail, but they're going to get it right eventually. And the cost to orbit will decline tremendously.

    SpaceX is a private company. NASA could have been doing this years ago, but they didn't want a low cost to orbit. It would threaten their monopoly on big expensive boosters and their lock on manned orbital missions. Their big prime contractors don't want low-cost operations either.

    It took decades to lay the groundwork, but now we're about there. We have the advanced materials, and they're improving. We have the control systems, and they are compact and effective. We have the CAD systems to perform the designs efficiently and to simulate the prototypes. We even seem to have hypersonic scramjets, although the DoD will barely admit to them. In the U S at least, I think you can still find some adventuresome souls who will accept the risks. See you in orbit.

    • Michael Hanlon

      I have huge hopes that Mr Musk may be one of the people willing to take the risks to get us out of this stagnant period. We need more like him - the Brunels of the 21st Century.

  • Michael Hanlon

    No, it isn't. There is good evidence that the radiation released by Chernobyl will lead to several hundred premature deaths in time, mostly as a result of untreated (but treatable) thyroid cancer. But these deaths will be epidemiological deaths; we will never be able to name these people. The several dozen I referred to are the direct, attributable deaths caused by the accident - mostly firefighters technicians (incredibly brave heroes) who were on the front line fighting the fire.
    Compare the several THOUSAND people who die every year as a result of coal extraction and burning and it is clear that nuclear safety is, in the scheme of things, a non-issue.

  • montana83

    Communism began to fall. The Lefties all joined the Eco-Fascist movement and there goes science - being sacrificed to the Obama voting Luddite Fascisti.

  • http://www.raybounmulligan.com/ Marlowe Fox

    Thank you Mr. Hanlon for a pragmatic starting point to the discussion of real innovation v. spurious innovation.

    You have taken up the unenviable task of asking society not to pat itself on the back -and, for this, you should not expect laurels to be thrown at your feet.

    However, your endeavor could be one of the most important in contemporary society and is reminiscent of early 20th technology philosopher Lewis Mumford.

    Mumford was critical of contemporary society and described specious progress as:

    "an auto rolling backward downhill, continued on its course because the driver preferred the sensation of motion, even if it were backwards, to the recognition of his inability to reverse the direction and go forward."

    The problem may lie with our ability to "meta-think"; a phenomenon cognitive philosopher Daniel Dennett describes as 'thinking about thinking.' This may allow society to determine if we really need bigger skyscrapers, fancier cars, and more social media outlets.

    Instead, we have a society wanting of critical thought. E.L. Doctorow's "Book of David" describes:

    No matter what is laid down there will be people to put their lives on it.
    Soldiers will instantly appear, fall into rank, and be ready to die for it. And
    scientists who are happy to direct their research toward it. And keen-witted
    academics who in all rationality develop the truth of it. And poets who find
    their voice in proclaiming the personal feeling of it... And the religious will pray
    for a just end to it...

    Hanlon argues "Today, progress is defined almost entirely by consumer-driven, often banal improvements in information technology."

    This concept has its nascence in Pragmatism whose most instrumental theorist was an American philosopher and psychologist William James. He posited that an idea was essentially worthless –its only utility was derived from its audience’s preparedness to accept it. The modern free market has put this concept on steroids as it is the consumer’s wants and demands that now shape ideas.

    It a capitalist democracy -isn't this the way it supposed to be?

    For better or worse? Until political and social upheaval do us part?

    Hopefully not. And I think Hanlon brings up same great talking points to being a very important discussion.

  • putesputes

    Oh boy... let's blame the perceive lack of innovation on everything BUT the problems themselves. (Feminism, capitalism, video games, fat people, you name it.) Look the problems today are way more difficult. Why we don't have flying cars? It is for the same reason that millions of years of evolution has not come up with a solution to the problem of flying elephants. It is simple physics. It requires a lot of power to lift two tons in the air and keep it there for a long period of time. Power requires energy, a lot of it. Any energy solution you can come up will be impractical as long as it depends on Newton’s third law. To make flying cars practical we first need to learn how to counteract gravity. We are way off from that because we don't even know if it possible. The same thing can be said for many of the other problems that we are looking for a solution today. By the way, keep in mind that discovery does not occur overnight. 200 years passed between Pythagoras and Archimedes. 1776 years passed between Archimedes and Galileo. 160 years between Newton and Einstein. Progress is slow because you need a lot of data to reach conclusions. Right now we are on a period of data collection. From the beginning of the universe to quantum physics to understanding DNA, today we collecting a lot of data. Maybe, 100 or 1000 years from now another genius will make sense of all the data and come to another Eureka moment.

    • wGraves

      It's just mgh. The energy necessary to lift two tons of mass 100 miles straight up is contained in 24 gallons of gasoline. Yes, it's more complicated than that, but energy isn't the main problem.

  • Commander Howdy

    Perhaps look at education. Britain's best scientist's came through the Grammar schools; most of these were closed down heading into the period of stagnation identified.

    • Michael Hanlon

      This was, I think, a global phenomenon - although it is interesting that forty years ago the intellectual life of Britain was dominated by people who went to state schools (not just science but artists and actors and so forth) whereas now it is dominated by the private school elite.

  • Michael Hanlon

    Many thanks!

  • Michael Hanlon

    Not sure I understand your point.

  • Michael Hanlon

    I agree that the Internet is huge. But we are not seeing the flood of game-changers that we saw in the GQ. We need revolutions in energy, communications, transport, agriculture and food. The last 40 years has given us only one of these.

  • Michael Hanlon

    So you have lots of cheap computer memory and a very powerful telephone. That plays games. Sorry, but that ain't a Moonshot still less killing smallpox.
    No cigar.

  • Robert Whitlock

    I'm probably late to the party but you mention:"There has been no new Green Revolution. We still drive steel cars
    powered by burning petroleum spirit or, worse, diesel. There has been no
    new materials revolution since the Golden Quarter’s advances in
    plastics, semi-conductors, new alloys and composite materials"
    What about the more than 4 million hybrid vehicles on the road? What about the fact that 4 percent of US electricity was generated in 2014 by Windmills? What are those blades made of? Carbon Fiber...That's kinda new ain't it? What about the fact that you can now buy a 3D printer for less than 5 thousand US dollars? What about Space X? Tesla? Photovoltaics based upon other advances in material science will be quietly powering the servers in the years to come...

    • Michael Hanlon

      Hybrids : a dead end technology im afraid. Mixture if commercial hype and tax-dodging is driving this fad. Hybrids will be dead by 2030.

      Carbon fibre : been around since the 1950s.

      Windfarms: lots of potential, but not cutting edge technology. We have been using wind power for centuries.

      Space X: Elon Musk is a genius. He is one of our best hopes for a renewal of progress.

      Yes there is progress. I'm not denying that. The issue is that the RATE of progress has slowed very dramatically in the last 40 years.

  • fibonnaci
    • Michael Hanlon

      so far just science fiction I am afraid.

  • Dave

    The premise of this article is dubious at best. The writer is trying to massage his subjective opinion into some sort of quantifiable fact, and in doing so, overlooks vast swaths of industry and techology. I was an adult in 1971, so I have an adult memory of what life, medicine, and technology was like at that time. The changes have been astounding, substantive, and remarkable.

    You could play this game with any invention and era. You could say it has slowed since the invention of the wheel, the alphabet, movable type, the steam engine, blah blah blah.

  • Iluvyou

    I think the risk reason is substantial. Further, unlike the golden quarter, today the boomers are not retiring at the same age as past cohorts did. Older people are more risk adverse and by staying in the board rooms until their 70's businesses are less willing to take risks.

    Maybe coincidentally, the gold exchange standard ended around the time of innovation. It seems to me since then the price of living has risen at a faster rate than it did prior. This seems to have focused societies attention on keeping up with rising costs and benefited the FIRE sectors. Instead of working for an innovating company, math and physics PHds now head to Wall Street to trade complex financial instruments.

    These two topics are connected. Retirement is more expensive due to rising costs and maybe and a misguided view of using CPI to index cost of living adjustments, so risk adverse elders stay in the work force, while innovating STEM graduates head to Wall Street.

    These two together create a situation where talent is being misallocated.

    • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

      I might point out that the numbers of us seniors who are actually in board rooms, and thereby in a position to impede innovation, is vanishingly small. The great majority of us are either already poor or at most a couple of small retirement checks away from poverty. If you're laid off for being too old or too well paid in your 50s or 60s, try finding a new job of any sort; even Wal-Mart won't touch you. You'll have to look elsewhere for a scapegoat for the decline in new technologies, I'm afraid.

      You won't find it among STEM grads either. Just how many of those juicy jobs "trading complex financial instruments" do you think there are, anyway? There might be enough to make up one modest chapter of Skull and Bones; it's those legacy elites who fill the up-and-coming boardroom slots, not the stray PhDs they keep locked up in the back rooms.

      Talent may well be misallocated, but blaming the outsiders for it, or for bad decisions made by management, hardly helps the situation.

  • http://CureCancerNow.wikiFoundry.com Richard Karpinski

    Let's just look at cancer. See the Secret History of the War on Cancer for some reasons why there has been so little progress. See Dogmatism in Science and Medicine for more thoughtful comment on the broader issues.

    For cancer progress, ask Scholar.Google.com GcMAF oleic acid. Full text of a couple of science papers freely available there show amazing low cost results including an average reduction in tumor size for all cancers of 25% in the first week of treatment with no vile side effects.

    The interesting point for me is that only those cancers that produce high levels of nagalase and thus inhibit the natural production of GcMAF get big enough to be seen by oncologists. The others, that is most, were killed by activated macrophages. Since we make GcMAF in our own bodies, unless so inhibited, the lab made GcMAF is a mere supplement and anyone can buy it at GcMAF.EU for much less than the cost of either radiation of chemotherapy. Insurance companies could save lots of money if they got oncologists to try GcMAF first and save the expensive and hazardous treatments for the few cases where it doesn't work well enough.

    Still, with health care in a capitalist system, those who profit from less effective treatments will oppose this gentler and more effective approach to curing cancer.

  • http://CureCancerNow.wikiFoundry.com Richard Karpinski

    Very recent progress has been made for "paralyzed still cannot walk". One man with a broken back recently had his spinal cord reconnected using the support cells that permit restoration of olfactory nerves to help. Despite that it may take years for this to be more widely applied, it seems like a serious breakthrough to me. Conventional wisdom thought that reconnecting a broken spinal cord was just not possible. Be happy that we keep finding new ways to contradict such wisdom.

  • http://CureCancerNow.wikiFoundry.com Richard Karpinski

    We humans naturally get higher blood pressure as we age. I do not believe that taking drugs to reduce blood pressure has actually been shown to improve health. Even when they work, I think it only makes the doctors think they've done some good and of course big pharma is happy to have another life long customer for the drugs.

  • http://CureCancerNow.wikiFoundry.com Richard Karpinski

    Most GM products arrange to give us more poisons in our foods, which certainly causes the safety conscious to try to avoid even those few that actually are improved by the changes made. But capitalism encourages Monsanto to seek to limit consumer choice by buying other seed selling companies and suppressing their products. Any harms to the health of the consumers does not interfere with their profits.

    • oneproudbrowncoat .

      Are botany or molecular biology fields in which you are qualified, sir?

  • http://CureCancerNow.wikiFoundry.com Richard Karpinski

    Nuclear energy has two big problems. First, as shown by Fukushima, it is not walk away safe. Secondly, it generates a large amount of high level radioactive waste, using only a small fraction of the energy in the uranium fuel.

    When we, or India or China, develop the low pressure high temperature waste burning molten salt reactors designed to be walk away safe, then the big problem of what to do with the radioactive waste will be largely solved. We can use it to fuel all the electricity we need world wide for the next 50-95 years.

    Yes, it will take time to engineer and test and get approval for this radically safer kind of nuclear energy, but the end of cheap oil will be pushing us forward. And since we won't be willing to do what it takes to stop adding to the CO2, we will necessarily discover that that problem is not what the IPCC claims it is.

  • Jerome Bigge

    Bought my first transistor radio in 1960. Only advantage was "battery life". However, it was the transistor that made it possible to have the far more reliable electronic devices we enjoy today. The old vacuum tube TV sets were a "repairman's dream" due to the short life spans of vacuum tubes. Plus it took a lot more electricity to power a vacuum tube device than today's transistors. However the low cost "consumer electronics" that we have today only came about because of their manufacture by people paid a small fraction of what Americans would be paid to do the same work. Which allows us to discard still functional electronics just to own the "latest model"...

    • Noibn48

      We replaced our own tubes at the kiosk in the hardware store.

  • JenJen10

    This is a "what if" article, but the author makes it sound like all this is non-speculative. I agree with most of it, insofar as what he lists, but he leaves out a lot.

    As just one example, I disagree with nuclear power being the panacea to climate
    change. Nuclear power is not safe, it’s the least stable of the forms of power & when it goes bad it’s the most likely to kill huge numbers of people. He mentions 3 mile Island & Chernobyl but fails to mention the tsunami that took out so many of Japan’s power plants just 2 yrs ago & left radioactive water that is now reaching California’s shores. Why?

    • Michael Hanlon

      There are no panaceas. But a huge rollout of 4th-gen nuclear reactors would get us out of a whole load of holes right now. The tsunami actually took out one Japanese plant (not many). The waves killed a lot of people, but the damage to Fukushima killed no one.

      • JenJen10

        But the radioactivity is still a problem, look at how much time & trouble Japan has had to invest in just the cleanup. And yet they're restarting the plants.

        If they just put solar panels on every home, no need for power plants of any kind.

  • Raj

    Much of what goes by the name of research is a shame. Directed studies , often short term in nature, are conducted to further agendas. Today, we have a study that says eight hours of sleep is necessary, tomorrow we will have another one that says eight hours is too much. One study says we must drink eight glasses of water, another says this is too much. Where are we headed?

    • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

      That's not quite fair. Most research is actually pretty well done; the problem is that human problems are just enormously complicated, and even fairly minor differences in the research design and/or definition of variables and/or measurement techniques can have major effects on the conclusions. No single study can ever be complete or the last word. Research is inevitably a cumulative process, with each new study hopefully adding something to the overall picture.

      That's not to say that there isn't badly done or agenda-driven research taking place, and sometimes it takes a practiced eye to distinguish it from good stuff. The popularization of research, which seeks for easy answers that can be announced as "truth" and is often based on pretty superficial acquaintance with the studies themselves, is a lot more problematical, and often the source of more confusion than the enlightenment that it purports to deliver.

  • Foo

    The author was going great until he started rambling on about risk aversion, which probably has little to do with the end of the so called "golden quarter". A world where nuclear power ends climate change is utter fantasy, not because of the risks, but because of the profit, or lack thereof in the case of nuclear power relative to oil. Which to me, points again back to the root cause being an unchecked drive for profit. As always, follow the money.

  • john ward

    A brilliant and measured piece, whether one agrees or not.
    I think we have done two things: first, lose the Voyager Gene; and second, adopt a neoliberal business model. The two aren't mutually exclusive, but they both contribute to the same outcome: underinvestment in giant-leap discoveries.
    All we have had since the early 1970s is quantified steps, not giant leaps. The same is true in theatre, music and literature: stick to the known genre, cos that means bums on seats.
    Neoliberalism is a washout on every possible dimension of judgement, but its tendency to stagnant safety-first is by far the worst.
    https://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2013/06/09/waking-up/

  • http://jimcannotfixthis.blogspot.co.uk/ Moor Larkin

    It used to be remarked that that period of scientific innovation was sparked by "the war", and it was as if we wanted something good to have come out of "the war" that made us want to believe that. The longer I've been around the more I think that what actually happened was that "the war" stopped all the natural innovations and killed many of the innovators. Once the recovery from that destruction had occurred humankind had twenty years or more to catch up on, which they did, so we saw what should have happened in 1935 beginning to happen in 1955, and so on but then everything was accelerated because there was a whole lotta developing to do. A future deferred perhaps.

    • Michael Hanlon

      A good point. Think of what German science would have been like if the Nazi state had never existed.

  • http://portonvictor.org Victor Porton

    One thing not considered in this article was progress in mathematics. A thing which may cause some professional mathematicians to wonder a little is that me, an amateur mathematician, has discovered around the border of 20/21 centuries a thing (I call it "funcoids") which could be classified as classical 20 century math, just not came on-time. I got one low hanging fruit which other have not noticed. Well, this fact is an exception. A modern mathematics is much different than earlier ages of math. I need to study yet much to become on par with professional mathematicians and integrate my new theory with modern mathematics. Now I am writing the first volume of a research monograph ("book" in lay person language) to contain the results of my research. It seems that this was the last low hanging fruit of the 20 century mathematics (at least, so it seems for me).

    • Michael Hanlon

      ??

  • http://www.sterndavidi.com David Stern

    Innovation can create totally new products or improve existing ones. Perhaps we have just seen more of the latter in the 40 years. Perhaps this moves in waves?

  • Michael Hanlon

    I never stated that the Internet is not hugely impressive. It is. But there is (surely) more to innovation than YouTube and Facebook. Twitter is hardly life-changing in the same way as, say, vaccination. Many of the things you list are trivial and ephemeral.

    • oneproudbrowncoat .

      To play devil's advocate, social media is beginning to emerge as an educational force. When you can show a person in Mombasa a video explaining- literally showing- how HIV is transmitted, or how to build a biomass methane digester for cooking gas (to help reduce carbon emissions), it does make a difference. Incremental, I grant you, but notable nonetheless.

  • Michael Hanlon

    OK. So you are diagnosed with coronary artery disease tomorrow. Or some kind of ghastly brain tumour. Or you are in West Africa and get Ebola. Of you are HIV+ How about, indeed, some nano-tech pharmaceuticals? You can ask, but your doctor will laugh. Most of the stuff you talk about is just that - talk. Or hype. Or websites. Yes yes yes. We have wonderful computers. Everyone bangs on about our wonderful computers. But we need more than IT to drive progress.

  • https://www.lode.de/ BTomorrow

    The 'quarter century boom' was simply businesses recovering from the utter destruction of economic and scientific progress that was WW2.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Not entirely. I thought this was the case until I started thinking about it some more and realised that WW2 as the sole explanation for the GQ was a red herring.

  • Jon Barnhart

    Lets look at some specific complaints. I'm not a medical guru, so I will skip those. I am an expert at VoIP with products on the market, with an avid interest in aerospace and do rocketry a hobby....

    1: Air travel time. It's against the law to exceed the speed of sound over land. The speeds we fly at now are the most economical subsonic speeds. We have the technology to make supersonic jets, but until they can be widely used, it isn't going to happen. I would like to be able to fly to Australia in a third the time, but we need a regulatory environment where this can prosper.

    2: Going to the moon. This is a long LONG debate in aerospace circles. The problem is there isn't much useful there. We need to be able to get there at a price that is far more affordable. This is happening as we speak. SpaceX (and others, SpaceX is merely the farthest along) is working on reusable rockets which we've known we need since the beginning of space travel. There will be a revolution in space travel, but it will happen when we finally have vehicles that aren't used for 3ish minutes and thrown away.

    3: I am happily puttering away learning 3D printing. This is going to be a huge revolution. Right now, comparitively, it's where computers were in about 1980. We are looking at a HUGE innovation and change in how we manufacture just about everything. The assembly line vs. the 3D printer will be very interesting for the next several decades.

    4: The Internet - we still are expanding this rapidly. The difference on this from 1990 is just staggering.

    5: Smart devices - I just installed a Nest thermostat for my mom. Spiffy little device even takes the weather forecast into account to determine how to optimally heat her home. There are others, and we've barely gotten started. Smartphones are now everywhere and are seriously changing the way people interact, for both better and worse.

    It's not that progress has stopped. Far from it. It's a question of where are we focusing our efforts and what we're interested in. For my grandparents, the automobile was the big thing. For my parents, it was air travel as it allowed us to visit relatives clear across the USA while everyone owned a car. For me, I'm watching and hoping I can get into space on a commercial carrier.

    We have cars that can drive themselves. Once this gets better established we can start working on cars that fly themselves. One of the biggest barriers to flying cars is operator training and control. We've got helicopters and turbines that can fly small vehicles, but there's so few people willing to invest both the time and money to fly them we have a bit of a problem. IMO this will become much less of an issue when we have reliable control systems and the time factor is drastically reduced.

    This is not a case of dead progress. Not at all. For technology, it's a great time to be alive.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Good points, and I will try to answer them.
      It is not against the law to exceed the speed of sound over land. It was made so in the US, at Boeing's behest, to try to cripple Concorde. Interestingly the Soviets allowed Concorde to fly as fast as it wanted to over their territory.

      Going to the Moon. There is lots that is useful there, most notably the view. The Moon is the ideal place to build a large, Earth-finding telescope. It could be the repository for archive materials such as seedbanks. The Moon is, in effect, a huge, free, stable and virtually immortal space station. A remarkable asset that we should make use of.

      3D Printing. A huge innovation but its impact on the manufacturing industry has, to date, been limited. The point about the Golden Quarter was not just the pace of innovation, but the pace at which innovation was pressed into service. I was writing about 3D printing 10 years ago; I do not possess a single 3D printed object. This is poor. If 3D printing had been invented in 1955 it would be EVERYWHERE by 1965.

      Internet. Yes, a staggering achievement. That I give all credit to.

      Smart devices: horizontal innovation, not vertical. Interesting and useful but not game changing.

      Smart cars: yes, probably the Next Big Thing. I agree.

  • New Man

    Some of the intransigents of progress stem from the income streams spouted by the last round of innovations and their protectors...like motors that run on water...really

  • oneproudbrowncoat .

    "And furthermore: How many people will die or suffer of that radiation in Japan?"

    Would you care to give us a number and cite a source?

  • gubblerchechenova

    What a dumbass. The article answers itself.

    "We are living longer. Civil rights have become so entrenched that gay marriage is being legalised across the world and any old-style racist thinking is met with widespread revulsion. The world is better in 2014 than it was in 1971."

    That is why there's no progress, at least in social science. PC has become so entrenched that we can't honestly debate anything anymore.

    We must believe that MLK was a god, whites have nothing to fear from blacks(when in fact blacks are stronger and more aggressive and therefore brutalize non-black groups), and that homo-worship is a gift from god.

    With such mindless PC dominating debate, no wonder there's no progress in fresh ways of thinking. So many thinkers, politicians, and academics are afraid to discuss things freely out of fear of being blacklisted by the Power Elite dominated by Jews who run Wall Street, Washington, Las Vegas, Hollywood, High-Tech, courts, and etc.
    US is no longer even a democracy. it's a Jewish-dominated oligarchy.

    Look what happened to James Watson.

    'Old-style racist thinking is met with widespread revulsion'

    Really?

    Then how does Hanlon explain America's mindless support of Zionist crushing of Palestinians?

    How does he explain the UVA hoax where fictional rapists of some fraternity were defamed because some nasty Jewish woman(Sabrina Rubin Ederly) hates 'blonde aryan looking men'? Jews seem to get away with 'old style racist thinking' against white gentiles.

    And how does he explain the de-blackening of big cities via section 8 and gentrification?

    How does he explain that Bill Clinton the Democrat locked up tons of black males to bring down crime?

    PC makes us pretend that all is hunky dory when, in fact, if we judge white Liberals and Jews by what they DO(as opposed to what they say), they are a bunch of bullshitters.

    And is 'gay marriage' being legalised all over the world? Or is it being enforced against the wish of the majority by the Jewish elites that have taken over the West? Where is 'gay marriage' in Africa, Asia, or the Middle East? Or Russia or Central Asia? Or most of Latin America? It's only in the Western nations where Jews have gained media/financial/government dominance that 'gay marriage' has been forcefed to the entire population.

    By the way, if Hanlon thinks 'marriage equality' is a 'civil right', what's his position on 'same family marriage' or 'incest marriage'? Or polygamy? Why do only rich homos, allied with richer Jews, get the privilege to change marriage laws but other sexual deviants don't? Will Hanlon explain that?

    • http://jdeveland.com/ JD Eveland

      Obviously, there is political correctness, enforced (at least sporadically) by a variety of socio-economic interests and groups. But there is also an attitudinal zeitgeist that tends to make human life easier over time. 200 years ago, the zeitgeist was pretty clear that it was a good thing to have certain kinds of human beings as property wholly owned by others, that women were systematically inferior to men in almost all ways, and that any form of sexual attraction other than the most traditional was evil to the point of deserving death. Since then, the end of slavery, the partial empowerment of women, and an end to(most) legal suppression of gay folks have represented changes in this broad social consensus about how people ought to treat other people. You are welcome to deplore these changes if you like, but you can't say that they are attitudinal changes simply forced on society by small groups of nattering nabobs.

      What you term "PC behavior" is simply change operating at the margins, pushing envelopes toward further social change. Sometimes it has an effect; sometimes not. And it certainly never enacts new social behavior through force, at least in the short run. Some folks take it very seriously; other shrug it off. Social attitudes change over time because people push them to change, but nonfunctional changes seldom become institutionalized.

      If you really believe that we'd have a lot more technological change and improved lives by restoring slavery, patriarchy, and killing queers, I'd love to hear your justification for it. Political correctness is simply an epiphenomenon on long-range change in social attitudes and beliefs. You can say or think anything you like about any of those changes; PC is simply an umbrella term intended to disparage those who disagree with you. If you're losing the opinion war, it's because your opinions aren't as good overall as those of your opponents.

  • Janet__M

    There's at least one post-1971 innovation of which I am personally aware. My father died in 1962 of a coronary occlusion (blockage of the artery supplying blood to the heart). I suffered the same problem in 2001 but survived by virtue of a coronary artery bypass graft, a technology unknown to the surgeons in 1962.

  • cunudiun

    The Vietnam War marked the onset of dementia.

  • http://biofry.wordpress.com/ Robert

    Very good points! We'll destroy the whole biosphere because we're afraid that less than zero will die developing advanced nuclear technology.

  • Arroyowash

    Interesting thoughts, but let’s get our head out of the sand about medical “progress.” In 1990 when we launched the Human Genome Project, most everyone thought we would find one gene connected to one disease. Drug the gene and poof! Disease gone. In 2003, we finished mapping the genome and – surprise – we have less genes than they thought they would find, and – surprise – the genes work together. And that stuff we thought was junk DNA? Turns out it is the epigenome which controls whether “bad” genes express or not. So Alzheimer’s is not something to “cure” but something to prevent. Why did we not have so much Alzheimer’s before WWII? We know some parts of the puzzle involve more B12 and less sugar in our diet. The more researchers study it, the more it is looking like a case of diabetes type 3. There is no pill for this.

    A missing part of your thought process puzzle is to think that we can survive well on pizza, French fries, and soda. We need to nourish the body’s 80+ trillion cells; we cannot just pop a pill when things no longer go well.

    It is impossible, you say, for a new boon in medicines to come along. You may be right. The WHO said a few years ago the world reached a tipping point – more people die from chronic diseases than infectious diseases. It appears we will get less help in the future from synthetic creations in a drug lab than in social policies; Mexico became the most obese nation in the world and passed a soda tax to decrease consumption. Early indications are it’s working.

    Centuries ago, Hippocrates, the “father of medicine,” said: Let food be the medicine and medicine be thy food. In the 1800s, we patented margarine. Some would say that was the first Frankenfood. We need to regain our respect for the workings of the human body if we want to overcome the epidemics of Alzheimer’s, cancer, heart disease, diabetes, etc.

  • http://www.filmrally.com/ sally

    Thanks for your intelligent, informed, and nuanced rebuttal to this absurd article. Some of the folks taking issue with you are not intellectually equipped to do so.

    • Michael Hanlon

      Hi Sally. Good to meet you. You writing in support of what the article is saying? or not?

      • http://www.filmrally.com/ sally

        Yes I found the article very interesting and well thought out. It's nice to read an article that shows a different point of view. Thanks. I do love the quote "We could be in a world where Alzheimer’s was treatable, clean nuclear power had ended the threat of climate change, and cancer was on the back foot"

  • Vinder94

    Actually, Hanlon does have a point. The point being that the internet hd to be invented before Apple or Microsoft. In fact, a CERN physicist named Tim Berners-Lee in trying to find a technologically feasible way for scientists to communicate to each other and share their research results. This information has been referenced from the book, "Present at the Creation: The Story of CERN and the Large Hardron Collider." This was in 1980. That being said, this shows how businesses only took the initiative in "selling" internet through the personal computer. And according to the article, he did not "lump" the internet in 1945-1970. He just acknowledged that basic historical fact that widespread information technology was not around yet. In addition, the whole article makes sense if one were to understand that just because a society is prosperous, that does not mean that this society can produce a paradigm shift. That can only happen through basic scientific research, research that ponder big questions about everything scientific and/or philosophical. In case, you missed that point, academia did give rise through the internet a la CERN, not a private institution. Also, information technology and computers have come a long way in development. This technology is dependent on many other things: gutta-percha wires, computer coding, quantum physics, and more. Thus ends my correction to all of the ignorant posts commenting on this insightful article.

  • Vinder94

    Another thing: the idea had to come first before the actual technology.

  • jjthetraveler

    I know that big govt types would never admit it. But the problems are quite simple. Big govt has choked innovation out of the economy. Over regulation, an incomprehensible tax code, crony capitalism, bloated bureaucracy, And campaign funding laws designed to make beating incumbents virtually impossible. Capitalism died when John Q Public learned that entitlements offer be a nice living without working. America died when our politicians figured out that buying votes with entitlements and earmarks meant never losing an election. The solution to these problems is very simple. Term limits, flat tax that everyone pays and can be used for noting more (with a law prohibiting raising it unless national emergency, a sunset on most laws and all regulations. A 25% reduction in all forms of govt. Elimination of any entitlement that wasn't earned. A balanced budget amendment. We could put America back on track in just one secession of congress but it'll never happen.

  • Phil J Malloy

    of all the achievements of the time.... you list the pill above all else?? really???

  • Lakrov Savage

    So we gain less because we risk less. That was my takeaway.

  • purefuture alias stefan

    I agree with the author,,I wanted a flying car,,I goted 140 characters!! sooo true
    I'm sick of the lack of new discoveries and even if Moore's law is still on track what am I supposed to do with a teraflop of memory if what I really want is look at my emails from a moon colony!!

  • Tara Connor

    And if you guys had been reading major real estate business news, you would find, China is buying up huge areas of land, in the US. lots of Chinese have already come over here, to live in their own communities.The Chinese are literally buying up all our land, and moving over here.Immigration gives them no trouble.They are already HERE. (quote online-real- estate-business news) They own the US, are buying it up, moving huge masses over here. --right under your nose.

  • Tara Connor

    HAH HAH, yes, i am considering taking classes in Mandarin, so i can at least talk to the new immigrants who are here, (try California) and buying up the country. they might end up being my neighbors, i may as well.

  • Tara Connor

    I don't think "halted the climb" is exact as "bloated, and ready to pop, and collapse"-is. get real.

  • MarkP

    Just because YOU don't see or understand certain advancements doesn't mean they aren't happening. Look at material science meta materials that work like cloaking devices for various frequencies are being developed at an incredible rate, plastics from things other than hydrocarbons are common now, unheard of in the 1970s. Semiconductors made from wood cellulose, graphene, the list goes on and on. There are all kinds of advancements going on all the time. Many of them VERY significant but because they aren't as sexy to YOU as Concorde or Apollo you dismiss or overlook them as being insignificant. Think about Watson, the computer that competed on Jeopardy a few years ago. That system understood, to a limited extent anyway, natural language, it wasn't just programmed with facts it was taught how to make connections in information. You may call it an incremental improvement in computing power that is based on work from the '60s and before but while the hardware may be that how IBM thought about teaching Watson was science fiction until the the '90s. In physisc you have an Electromagnetic drive that uses no propellant being tested successfully by NASA and other agencies in complete contradiction to common sense and the laws of conservation of energy of just a few years ago. Heck the math for a theoretical warp drive was done by a Mexican mathematician in the early '90s and refined by physics and mathematicians fairly recently.
    How many times have "futurists" been completely wrong about the future? No one predicted the incredible revolution that constant connection and communication would have on the world. You fail to see the changes around you because change has become ubiquitous and constant.

  • LeightonESmith

    How are teenagers an innovation or achievement?