{"id":3689,"date":"1998-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1998-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-79-ni%c2%bd-4-fall-1998-straddling-the-millenia\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T01:55:25","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T01:55:25","slug":"vol-79-ni%c2%bd-4-fall-1998-straddling-the-millenia","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-79-ni%c2%bd-4-fall-1998-straddling-the-millenia\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 79 No. 4 &#8211; Fall 1998 &#8211; Straddling the Millenia"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The prospects for the human race                     may look perilous from where we stand today, but the millennium                     now coming to an end has something to say to us. It&#8217;s that                     we have come a long, long way &#8211; which suggests that we still                     have a long, long way to go&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> There were, broadly speaking, two schools of thought among                     educated people in Western Europe just before the end of the                     last millennium. One believed that the advent of the 11th                     century would bring the return to earth of Jesus Christ, who                     would preside over 1,000 years of universal contentment. The                     other was convinced that the world would end at midnight,                     1,000 A.D.<\/p>\n<p>In essence, we humans are still thinking along those same                     two lines a little less than 10 centuries later. The details                     may differ and the timing may not be so precise, but futuristic                     thinkers remain divided between those who believe that humankind                     is bound for bright new uplands of global wellbeing, and those                     who believe that it is hurtling towards its doom.<\/p>\n<p>On first examination, the weight of evidence would appear                     to be on the side of the latter. The threats of worldwide                     famine, environmental collapse, pandemics, climatic change                     and nuclear or biological warfare (or any combination of these)                     all argue that the human race is unlikely to last another                     thousand years, or even half that long.<\/p>\n<p>The most fearful menace to the survival of our species is                     that sometime in the next few centuries there will be too                     many of us on this earth for it to support us. World population                     is multiplying at a staggering rate: at 5 billion, it has                     increased by 2 1\/4 billion in the last half-century. If the                     current pace continues, it could double in another 50 years.<\/p>\n<p>The number of mouths to feed is proliferating even as hunger                     stalks the land in developing countries, and there are outbreaks                     of death by starvation. Some 800 million souls, more than                     25 times the population of Canada, live in the mainly malnourished                     state of what the United Nations calls &#8220;absolute poverty.&#8221;                     A further 3 billion live in &#8220;relative poverty,&#8221; meaning that                     they have little left over for material goods, education or                     health care after they have fed and sheltered themselves.<\/p>\n<p>On top of the pressure on the food supply, overpopulation                     carries a variety of related perils. Third world countries                     risk life- threatening pollution as they turn to industrialization                     to support their burgeoning millions. The forested areas that                     serve as the lungs of our planet are rapidly being destroyed                     for fuel or farmland. Meanwhile, immense stretches of existing                     farmland are turning to desert as a result of overworking                     the soil.<\/p>\n<p>The spectre of wars, civil upheavals and mass movements                     of refugees as diverse groups compete for living space puts                     the finishing touches on a relentlessly grim scenario. It                     is enough to make one ask how anyone can realistically view                     the coming century, much less the coming millennium, with                     any degree of hope.<\/p>\n<p>The answer is that there is hope, and it lies in the certainty                     that material and social progress will continue to be made,                     just as it has been made steadily throughout the second millennium                     which will soon be ending. That progress will doubtless be                     faster and on a vastly larger scale than anything before it,                     because the resources behind it &#8211; especially the human resources                     &#8211; are vastly greater than ever before.<\/p>\n<p>It should be noted that most of the predictions of impending                     doom are made from the vantage point of the late 20th century.                     As the first population phalanx to enjoy instant mass communications,                     we have an overstimulated sense of danger, which the media                     gleefully plays upon with constant warnings that this or that                     can kill us. We seem to relish the thrills and chills of a                     good scare story. The self-annihilation of the human race                     is, of course, the best scare story of all.<\/p>\n<p>The fact that we receive so much current information at                     such a dizzying pace goads us into thinking largely in terms                     of what is new and sensational. Hence we tend to exaggerate                     the importance of current trends in the historical scheme                     of things.<\/p>\n<p>If we refer to the last thousand-year landmark prior to this                     one, we can gather a sense of our own ability to deal with                     the future.<\/p>\n<p>This here-and-now mentality has bred a certain (to coin                     a term) &#8221; chronocentricity.&#8221; Academics refer with straight                     faces to &#8220;pre-2Oth century history,&#8221; as if everything that                     has occurred in the past 3, 000 years were nothing but a warm-up                     for the all-consuming present. Only in this self-absorbed                     era could anyone have the hubris to declare &#8220;The End of History,&#8221;                     as political scientist Francis Fukuyama did in a best-selling                     book of that title in 1989.<\/p>\n<h3>Progress supplies its own momentum<\/h3>\n<p>Like children with their faces pressed against a window                     pane, the prophets of &#8220;Apocalypse Soon&#8221; see everything up                     close, and everything in their own image. They expect present                     trends to extend unaltered into the future: the internal combustion                     engine will run on ad infinitum, tainting the air and sucking                     up non-renewable oil reserves; wells and wetlands will be                     drained until they cease to yield water; pollutants will stream                     out of smokestacks until the ozone layer has been destroyed;                     in general, little or nothing will be done to relieve the                     battering which human activities are meting out to the earth.<\/p>\n<p>In making such assumptions, modern soothsayers ignore the                     reliable military exhortation always to expect the unexpected.                     Technological developments undreamed-of at present could make                     the problems that now seem so grave fade into insignificance,                     like the problem of smallpox, which killed untold millions                     before vaccination became standard worldwide. They further                     ignore the historical lesson of what happens when something                     bad is expected. What happens, usually, is that action is                     taken to head it off, or at least to cushion its worst effects.<\/p>\n<p>The habit of measuring everything against current or recent                     events is not conducive to a recognition of the long-term                     trends that vault over the ages. A long-term view yields quite                     a different picture of the future from straight-line projections                     of current trends. For instance, Felipe Fernandez-Armesto,                     author of the exhaustive history of the last thousand years                     called Millennium ( Bantam Press, 1995) dismisses fears that                     the world&#8217;s population will overwhelm the means to feed it.                     &#8220;Population trends have always provoked doom-fraught oracles,                     because their popular interpreters suppose that every new                     series will be indefinitely sustained; yet, beyond the short                     term, expectations based on them have never been fulfilled,&#8221;                     he observed.<\/p>\n<p>If we look at the second millennium as a cohesive whole,                     we can see that nothing, from plagues to famines to global                     wars, has stopped the human race from making progress. The                     great thing about progress, incidentally, is that it supplies                     its own momentum. Like a snowball, it gathers accretions which                     make it move ever farther and faster. As they work on the                     problems of humanity, the generations to come will have access                     to a huge legacy of expertise from the generations that preceded                     them.<\/p>\n<p>As we stand between one millennium and the next, we should                     look at what is behind us as well as what might be before                     us. For if we refer to the last thousand-year landmark prior                     to this one, we can gather a sense of our own ability to deal                     with the future. The prime impression we are likely to take                     away from this exercise is that human capabilities have been                     expanding exponentially. Pessimists as to the future start                     from the premise that &#8220;people never learn.&#8221; The story of the                     millennium is that they do.<\/p>\n<h3>Cities, citizenship, and civilization<\/h3>\n<p>In making this point, let us focus on Western Europe, if                     only because more documentation is available on what happened                     there than in other regions. A short list of Western European                     social conditions a thousand years ago runs alphabetically                     from bigotry through brigandage, despotism, disease, ignorance,                     illiteracy, insanitation, poverty, slavery, superstition,                     torture, and vermin galore.<\/p>\n<p>But people were learning even then, and as they did so they                     began to pull themselves out of the Dark Ages. The wisdom                     and practical knowledge of antiquity was being revived through                     translations of long-forgotten works from Greece, Rome and                     the Arab world. Breakthroughs were made in mathematics, architecture                     and musical notation. Members of the literate minority were                     communicating ideas long distance through the newly-developed                     media of manufactured paper and the quill pen.<\/p>\n<p>In social terms, however, the great advance out of the murky                     past was several generations in the future. New cities began                     to emerge in the late 1200s. With them the institutional foundation                     of today&#8217;s modern western society was laid. These prototypical                     municipalities were administered by guilds of merchants and                     artisans, and in time their citizens were granted well-defined                     rights in return for civic responsibilities. Cities gave a                     crucial boost to learning and innovation by acting as magnets                     for intellectuals and offering locales for universities.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2022\/08\/fall1998_1.gif\" align=\"right\" vspace=\"5\" hspace=\"5\" alt=\"image\"><\/p>\n<p>Citizenship gave rise to public spirit, and in due course                     hospitals and orphanages made their appearance. These institutions                     were the first tangible manifestations of what has since become                     the dominant political philosophy of civilization &#8211; the concept                     that the stronger should support the weaker, and that towards                     this end, the resources of a society should be shared.<\/p>\n<h3>Battling man&#8217;s inhumanity to man<\/h3>\n<p>As time passed, everyday life became more liveable for a                     growing number of people. From the 14th through the 18th centuries,                     the urge to do things better generated a great range of amenities                     which we now take for granted &#8211; eyeglasses, printed books                     and journals, dental fillings, currency, mail service, running                     water, street lighting, machine-sewn garments, canned food.<\/p>\n<p>The 18th century stands out as the time when technical progress                     took off on its present soaring trajectory. The invention                     of the steam engine ushered in the age of mechanical power,                     freeing men and women from their dependence on the strength                     of animals, the wind, or their own straining backs.<\/p>\n<p>That century also spawned the philosophical movement called                     the Enlightenment, which was to have more of a bearing on                     the future life of man than all the steam engines put together.                     For out of it came the theme of all subsequent civilized political                     discourse: that one man (women weren&#8217;t counted in those days;                     see below) was basically as good as another, and that therefore                     all had equal rights.<\/p>\n<p>The ideas of Enlightenment philosophers inspired action                     against man&#8217;s inhumanity to man, which hitherto had been practised                     routinely. Their pronouncements on inherent human rights had                     a heavy influence on the more thoughtful rulers of the day.                     Thus serfdom was abolished in several European regimes, and                     in 1784 France banned slavery, to be followed at length by                     Great Britain. Frederick the Great of Prussia bucked the accepted                     tradition of official intolerance &#8211; intolerance which could                     get a person tortured or executed &#8211; when he instituted freedom                     of worship and of the press.<\/p>\n<p>If women had been permitted to act as scholars, politicians,                     inventors, engineers and scientists all along, just think                     of how far ahead we might be.<\/p>\n<p>From then on, progress took on a certain inevitability as                     one development triggered another. The impetus from the 18th                     century carried over into the 19th, in which new ground was                     broken, so it seemed, month by month. Many of the key features                     of &#8220;modern&#8221; life were invented or discovered before 1900.                     These include electric power, telecommunications, automobiles,                     synthetic fabrics, movies, sound recording, and ultra-productive                     farm machinery.<\/p>\n<p>Human ingenuity has absolutely flourished in the present                     century, if not always to constructive ends; a lot of brain-power                     has been devoted to weaponry. Still, creative men and women                     have built on the achievements of the past to give us the                     mainly agreeable living conditions which we in the developed                     countries now enjoy. In historical terms, the most striking                     thing about those conditions is that they are obtainable by                     the majority, whereas they were once confined to the wealthy.                     Not for nothing has our time on earth been dubbed &#8220;the Century                     of the Common Man.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Providing a decent life through growth<\/h3>\n<p>Speaking of &#8220;man,&#8221; the record of progress which has been                     amassed so far is all the more remarkable for the fact that,                     until very recent times, at least half the population was                     prohibited from making more than a fraction of its potential                     contribution to the common wellbeing. If women had been permitted                     to act as scholars, politicians, inventors, engineers and                     scientists all along, just think of how far ahead we might                     be. Other large groups, too, have been barred from participating                     in progressive endeavours by discrimination and\/or lack of                     education. When the waste of all that human ability is taken                     into account, one might conclude that the human race has hardly                     scratched the surface of what it is capable of.<\/p>\n<p>In any case, developed nations have been able to provide                     a decent life for the bulk of their citizenry through economic                     growth, which is intertwined with technical and social progress.                     Yet among some opinion-makers, growth is a dirty word. In                     1972, the Potomac Associates of the Massachusetts Institute                     of Technology published a report called <em>The Limits to Growth<\/em>                     which called for a curtailment of economic activity lest it                     ruin the world within the next hundred years.<\/p>\n<p>The report was challenged four years later in <em>The Next                     200 Years<\/em>, a study by Herman Kahn and his colleagues at New York&#8217;s Hudson                     Institute. They made the point that the developed countries                     of today started out being undeveloped, and that it was economic                     growth that had carried them to their present stature. It                     is only logical that the same process will gradually run its                     course in the underdeveloped countries of today.<\/p>\n<p>It was in this vein that the Hudson group addressed the                     population\/ food conundrum. They wrote: &#8220;Pessimists argue                     that&#8230; the &#8216;best land&#8217; is already under cultivation &#8211; ignoring                     the fact that most land had to be developed for it to be considered                     &#8216;best land.'&#8221; They calculated that the world&#8217;s &#8220;potential                     farm acreage is over four times that now being harvested.&#8221;                     Thus a global population three times its present size could                     feed itself by natural means alone, without ever touching                     such possibilities as turning non-edible materials into food                     or growing crops without soil.<\/p>\n<p>It is possible that we may one day be sharing knowledge through                     radio waves with other beings in the universe.<\/p>\n<p>The Hudson team believes that economic growth in developing                     countries will automatically curb birth rates, as has happened                     over the past 150 years in western countries. Their theory                     is tied to the assumption that improved living conditions                     will be accompanied by rising levels of education, especially                     among women of child- bearing age, who marry later when they                     spend more years in school.<\/p>\n<p>To unabashed optimists like Alvin Toffler, education is                     the key to the whole question of human survival. He wrote                     in <em>The Third Wave<\/em>: &#8220;Never in history have there been so many reasonably educated                     people, collectively armed with so incredible a range of knowledge.                     &#8221; It is in the application of that body of knowledge &#8211; which,                     remember, is growing every hour of every day &#8211; that solutions                     to the present plight of humanity may be found in forms that                     are beyond imagining today.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2022\/08\/fall1998_2.gif\" align=\"left\" vspace=\"5\" hspace=\"5\" alt=\"image\"><\/p>\n<p>What we can imagine today is a world in which our learning                     can be applied to make many of our present problems simply                     go away. If cures for deadly diseases have been found in the                     past, it is reasonable to expect a cure for cancer. The search                     for clean energy may discover inexhaustible supplies of non-polluting                     fuel, or machines that run on no fuel whatever. We have advanced                     this far on the strength of the knowledge we have gathered                     ourselves; it is possible that we may one day be sharing knowledge                     through radio waves with other beings in the universe.<\/p>\n<p>But as far as human contentment is concerned, no advance                     in technology will matter much if future generations are to                     live in oppression and terror. Pessimists as to the future                     fear that desperate people will turn for leadership to demagogues                     who will impose tyranny. This is in tune with the cynical                     old refrain that &#8221; you can&#8217;t change human nature.&#8221; According                     to cynics, humans will always be governed by fear, greed,                     hate and other passions. Ergo, the strong will always prey                     on the weak.<\/p>\n<p>But human nature assuredly does change; you need only look                     back on the present millennium to prove it. To most present-day                     residents of western nations, the horrific symbols of the                     past like the torture dungeon and the slave ship might as                     well have come from outer space, so little do they have to                     do with attitudes today. It may strike us as unbelievable                     that offences as minor as forging a signature carried the                     death penalty in Britain as late as the 1800s. To be sure,                     cruelty and injustice persist in western societies, but we                     nonetheless have managed to put a great psychological distance                     between ourselves and our grisly ancestry.<\/p>\n<p>Efforts are being made through international cooperation                     to install at least an approximation of conditions in the                     western world in the developing countries. The trouble is                     that developed countries account for barely one-third of the                     people on earth, and social injustice, violence, despotism                     and official corruption are still rife in many places where                     the great majority of humans live.<\/p>\n<p>Given the poverty, environmental damage and strife that                     abound in large parts of the earth, trying to create a life                     worth living for everyone on it may seem impossible. But then,                     the history of the second millennium comprises a chronicle                     of seeming impossibilities becoming realities.<\/p>\n<p>Can the world be saved? Can it be made a much better place                     for all of its inhabitants in the process? No one can be sure                     about that first question; but as to the second, it has been                     done before, in the developing countries of the distant past.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":86,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[64],"class_list":["post-3689","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-64"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 79 No. 4 - Fall 1998 - Straddling the Millenia - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-79-ni\u00bd-4-fall-1998-straddling-the-millenia\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 79 No. 4 - Fall 1998 - Straddling the Millenia - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The prospects for the human race may look perilous from where we stand today, but the millennium now coming to an end has something to say to us. 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