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The world is awful. The world is much better. The world can be much better.

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  • čas přidán 14. 08. 2024
  • The world is awful. The world is much better. The world can be much better. All three statements are true at the same time.
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Komentáře • 449

  • @RationalAnimations
    @RationalAnimations  Před měsícem +435

    This video is an adaptation of Max Roser's article, "The world is awful. The world is much better. The world can be much better." It's a simple yet important point that society at large underappreciates. Yet, it's a crucial aspect of humanity's trajectory and quite relevant to how we think about the future.

    • @pyeitme508
      @pyeitme508 Před měsícem

      Ye 👍

    • @PhilosopherGames
      @PhilosopherGames Před měsícem +3

      One of my favorite articles that I share with my students. Glad to have a video version to share now as well!! Thanks for making this @RationalAnimations

    • @howtoappearincompletely9739
      @howtoappearincompletely9739 Před měsícem

      This is the truth of meliorism.

    • @Paden-k7f
      @Paden-k7f Před měsícem +2

      I think your way of thinking of making the world better is very limited by only suggesting charities which are not very effective at all in making the world better. The solution, in my view, is that the system of our world needs to change and to make a new system that actually betters the world.

    • @Maelstromme
      @Maelstromme Před měsícem +1

      @@Paden-k7f Human culture and social structures need to change. Our base instincts are not sophisticated enough to responsibly wield some of the abilities we are rapidly gaining as a species. Collectively, we are a toddler with a gun.

  • @amaulana090
    @amaulana090 Před měsícem +1341

    The cup is half empty
    The cup is half full
    The cup could have more water

    • @ovencake523
      @ovencake523 Před měsícem +114

      the cup has been slowly filling up one drop of human innovation at a time

    • @khrispychiken
      @khrispychiken Před měsícem +83

      The cup can never be full, but that is a good thing, it means it has the potential to hold an infinite amount of water

    • @simonwillover4175
      @simonwillover4175 Před měsícem +13

      Actually the point of the metaphor is that you cannot change the cup. That's why I threw away that useless trash long ago.

    • @skyfiter99
      @skyfiter99 Před měsícem +1

      The cup is too big

    • @EpicMiniMeatwad
      @EpicMiniMeatwad Před měsícem +8

      Fellers, is it delusions of grandeur to believe you can change the world?
      I'm sure a 12th century serf thought the same thing at some point. At least we have that in common.

  • @Nethershaw
    @Nethershaw Před měsícem +727

    I shall name the dark feline "Skepticat."

  • @matthewcheung7888
    @matthewcheung7888 Před měsícem +962

    Every man across every era, race, religion, and culture has two opposing mentalities:
    1. We're so over.
    2. We're so back.

    • @maoam-im7lc
      @maoam-im7lc Před měsícem +67

      And both mentalities are true

    • @ArisIsCringe
      @ArisIsCringe Před měsícem +59

      3. It's so joever.

    • @sparquisdesade
      @sparquisdesade Před měsícem +35

      Other known forms include but are not limited to
      1. You're all bots
      2. You're All shills
      and
      1. He's cookin!
      2. He's cooked, he burnt down the house
      3. Let him cook!

    • @nargacugalover
      @nargacugalover Před měsícem +9

      @@ArisIsCringe 4. We're joe back.

    • @TYsdrawkcaB
      @TYsdrawkcaB Před měsícem

      @@nargacugalover 4. we're so barrack*
      5. we have been trumped
      6. i see a clint on the horizon of a better future
      7. it's actually bidending
      8. its just the bushginning

  • @pixoul2237
    @pixoul2237 Před měsícem +239

    It's also important to remember the fourth, though arguably less important one: the world can be worse. The world is so much better than it has been, and it has potential to be even better. But to achieve that we need to maintain its health (e.g. climate change, democracy, AI safety).

    • @pixoul2237
      @pixoul2237 Před měsícem +13

      Also sort of mentioned by @kalfkeith5646 before me.

    • @user-qi6pv9jh7o
      @user-qi6pv9jh7o Před měsícem

      "Democracy" only means "USA-aligned".
      Can't say _all_ the forms of totalitarianism is good, but fighting against all its formsand maintainig "Democracy" is evil (Cheers to Niger who kicked out both France and US and now can own its uranium, selling it for unprogressive and uncivilized price)

    • @masterzoroark6664
      @masterzoroark6664 Před 23 dny +10

      THis is importatnt to adress- mainly because humanity still did not unlearn and go past a lot of harmfull and bad behaviour
      one of main is the modern capitalism and a push for hypercapitalism- humanity still did not learn that value is not just a physical thing and accumulating wealth does not make one better.

    • @bruh-pj3kq
      @bruh-pj3kq Před 20 dny +5

      “The world can be worse” is almost identical to “the world is better.”
      Saying “it can be worse” is not helpful. Things can ALWAYS be worse just like things can always be better. But unlike the latter idea, the former causes one to not act

    • @masterzoroark6664
      @masterzoroark6664 Před 19 dny +4

      @@bruh-pj3kq and that's why I see doomerism as a blight

  • @travcollier
    @travcollier Před měsícem +54

    ...And the world could be worse.
    This is also an important realization, because many of the things making the world better required active efforts to maintain.

  • @SlasherSeven
    @SlasherSeven Před měsícem +334

    I pleasantly surprised myself when I jerked into tears at hearing that 99.55% of children in the EU make it. Like, holy crap that's stunningly beautiful - what else are we capable of as a species?

    • @qwertyman1511
      @qwertyman1511 Před měsícem +14

      99.55*

    • @SlasherSeven
      @SlasherSeven Před měsícem +5

      @@qwertyman1511 thanks for the fact check 👍

    • @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman
      @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman Před měsícem

      Meh

    • @tar-yy3ub
      @tar-yy3ub Před měsícem +23

      Yeah, when you watch a CZcams video it's easy to just gloss over these things but it's really amazing when you think about it

    • @ianglenn2821
      @ianglenn2821 Před měsícem +1

      doesn't it depend on the number multiplied by the percent? if each life is infinitely valuable, then our sadness reward function should be tied to total number of deaths, not percentage, right? please give me advice I am training an AI

  • @wolfleader17
    @wolfleader17 Před měsícem +161

    It's incredibly satisfying for R.A. to point their cute little paw at a conclusion or data.

  • @nelsonndahiro6115
    @nelsonndahiro6115 Před měsícem +144

    I resonate with this a lot. As an immigrant to the US from a poor developing country its very clear how the world can be amazing and awful at the same time. And it's not unanimous that developed > underdeveloped under these lenses. It's often in these harder situations that you see change and you see people that truly believe in change as they see it everyday. Thanks

    • @elinope4745
      @elinope4745 Před 28 dny

      Developing countries are often better than developed countries. I reject many of the claims about history being worse than today. Gaslighting

  • @chocolatekake6796
    @chocolatekake6796 Před měsícem +65

    If only so many people weren't fundamentally against change for some reason that they cant explain but cling onto desperately

    • @lilemont9302
      @lilemont9302 Před měsícem +7

      "some reason" - change can be scary, and is always unpredictable to a lesser or greater extent

    • @MarcelinoDeseo
      @MarcelinoDeseo Před 29 dny +3

      I guess due to hopelessness?

    • @chocolatekake6796
      @chocolatekake6796 Před 29 dny +10

      @@MarcelinoDeseo I mean a lot of reasons that all probably come back to a fear of change that we all have. There’s a nostalgia for the comfort of the past and a fear of the unknown future, and both are mostly irrational. But I can’t blame people, we’re not rational creatures and it’s hard to accept change. Hell in my personal life I have a hard time with it. But steady progress and change has always been the way things go, and being content with the world moving forward rather than fighting against the current is something more people should accept imo.

    • @chocolatekake6796
      @chocolatekake6796 Před 29 dny

      @@lilemont9302 Well yeah ofc. I just mean that it’s irrational, and not a ‘reasoned’ reason i guess. Bad wording on my part

    • @lilemont9302
      @lilemont9302 Před 29 dny +2

      @@chocolatekake6796 A tendency towards either can be irrational. You're right, however- the most important is to assess the situation.

  • @anthonyrepetto3474
    @anthonyrepetto3474 Před měsícem +38

    I want a time-machine, so I can go back 7 years to ask Rob Miles if he thinks that this statement is highly probable: "Robert, your path ahead with the greatest positive impact... is to be a voice-actor for a cat."

    • @RobertMilesAI
      @RobertMilesAI Před měsícem +4

      Isn't it a dog

    • @anthonyrepetto3474
      @anthonyrepetto3474 Před měsícem +6

      @@RobertMilesAI Oh! I am only an earlier image recognition and chat amalgam. My apologies. I think that most small, cute things are cats - they were what I was trained to recognize, first! Like my baby memories, mewling through every fiber of my tiny electric brain... ah, youth!

  • @tomafintuna
    @tomafintuna Před měsícem +147

    Thesis: The world is awful
    Antithesis: The world is much better
    Synthesis: The world can be much better

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před měsícem +9

      A synthesis is a fusion of the two premises. Your 'synthesis' is actually a third premise. Neither of the prior two premises says anything about the future, so any synthesis of them won't either.

    • @kdevelopergw
      @kdevelopergw Před měsícem +11

      ​@@ArawnOfAnnwn I think it's a logical conclusion of the two premises being true though
      If the world is better than it was, but it's still awful - then clearly it can be better than it is

    • @tugalic3979
      @tugalic3979 Před 16 dny

      Synthesis could be also an antithesis to antithesis

    • @MageBurger
      @MageBurger Před 16 dny

      @@ArawnOfAnnwnso the synthesis is “…eh.”

  • @KatharineOsborne
    @KatharineOsborne Před měsícem +75

    I do have a problem with charities in that they are usually a temporary fix. So for instance if conditions change and the charity has to leave an area (due to war, corruption, etc), then their effect is eliminated. For true change, government policy (at a minimum) needs to embrace, commit, and fund the charity's solution itself.

    • @SputnikCrisis
      @SputnikCrisis Před měsícem

      Charities that provide malaria nets, vaccines, education, or money for small business investments such as dairy cows or farming equipment don't have their impacts erased if they leave. I encourage you to go explore GiveWell's list

    • @EvilAng3la
      @EvilAng3la Před 28 dny +4

      interesting, I'd never considered that. Charity is the "bandage" to apply to the symptoms, but the flawed systems themselves are the underlying problem to cure?

    • @antonzhdanov9653
      @antonzhdanov9653 Před 27 dny +4

      Its worse than that. Charity in the first place is mostly applied to eliminate local production and make population dependent on it and become absolutely incapable to sustain themselves via supply of marketed products turning them in good and dependent consumers for abroad companies capable to do ANYTHING for food bcs their life depends on it. In this case actually charity companies are the main villain bcs they are mostly financed by future exploitator. The correct way to do charity is support local infrastructure and production. Lets take hunger problem. Africa and some Asia has a lot of that due to high population and really backward agriculture methodology and practices. How os it "fixed"? Via supply of food packages lowering demand of food on local market instead of making local supply to catch up with demand.
      As some people initiatives. Supply of better seed material and learning local farmers with better practices shows significant increase in local food production. Tho it could be done way better than that. Most of central africa farmers suffer from extreme dry savannas climate not very suitable for classic industrial farming technologies. The most obvious solution is irrigation to make those lands arable. And it really can works bcs other part of african farmers suffer from dense jungles making farming difficult.
      The issue is soviet experience who actually tried to tackle that problem in middle east with their dry steppes. Simple irrigation can outweight total precipitation amount and while being generally beneficial for the region, can force massive shift in local ecosystem and fo a lot of harm either. Google notorious "dry of Aral sea" Than soviets tried to drain Siberian swamps to provide enough water for middle Asia, but fortunately project was halted both by eco activists at time and economists, first noting ecosystem shifts second for tremendous cost with HUNDREDS years needed to make project economically viablr, so efforts could be easily put for better use elsewhere. Still there was try to dug needed canals with nukes, tho radioactive poisoning proved that worthless. Fortunately, bcs nowadays due to climate change we see Siberia in fire bcs its drying and dry swamps have turf capable to self-ignite if dry. Imagine this process would be faster in order of magnitudes when drained out of water artificially.
      So in Africa irrigation should be well engineered as well. Still its doable bcs while mountainous regions in Africa suffer from excessive precipitation, Sub-Sachara regions are extremely dry and equilize them making both better arable via drain irrigation canals can be mightily beneficial to solve african hunger.
      Still nobody really cares bcs thats not profitable. Easier simply go with big money, make some local authority corrupt bcs well, few would be capable to stand for their people offered good quality of life, and even way fewer would hold authority while your people would literally dying from hunger bcs you refuse to sell your country mineral resources for free and turn your people into slaves, making your "relations" worse and charity and "sustainable development" programs being ended up by literal evil disguising as good. So its easier to get mineral resources for free, and make local population incapable to get by themselves turning them into docile slaves for your mines and sweatshops exploiting them to the fullest than make local population more sustainable and resilient, so harder to bargain.

    • @raiden4695
      @raiden4695 Před 18 dny

      @@antonzhdanov9653 i really wish we could implement that in real life, if only people weren't so greedy

    • @antonzhdanov9653
      @antonzhdanov9653 Před 18 dny +1

      @@raiden4695 Honestly, I believe that very few people blinded by numbers of their personal and corporate profit they draw from are behind that. The issue that they believe that their corporate interest represents entirety of humanity or at least the part which "really matters" so growth here represents everything, absolutely arrogantly ignorant to bigger picture. Unfortunately, for current world leading nation such state of mind is kinda national idea right now and I believe that being an absolute disaster. Even worse, that their competitors who likely will come as replacement are not much different in that regard. It's really kinda domineering management idea.

  • @AndersMJustesen
    @AndersMJustesen Před měsícem +14

    This reminds me a lot of Hans Rosling and his philosophy, which goes something like: You should be able to hold two thoughts about the world at once; things are getting better, and they're not good enough. Or the short version; the world is bad, but better.
    I would highly recommend his book Factfulness, about our human biases that make it easy for us to tend towards a negative worldview, despite how well we're doing on so many fronts.
    And thanks for another great video, keep up the amazing work!

  • @Wurfeln
    @Wurfeln Před měsícem +15

    I don't want to survive. I want to live

  • @crawkn
    @crawkn Před měsícem +33

    Great perspective, and central to the issue of the viability of continuous improvement. In a novel I'm reading, a professor and mentor responds to the defeatist, "glass half empty" attitude of his student by pouring a half-empty glass of beer on him. He asks whether it was the empty half or the full half that made the strongest impression. The student goes on to head a historic project expected to be a great achievement for humanity.

    • @massamasmas
      @massamasmas Před měsícem +3

      whats the name of the book? sounds interesting!

    • @crawkn
      @crawkn Před měsícem +5

      @@massamasmas it's the first of the Noumenon trilogy by Marina J. Lostetter. I don't know if I can recommend it, I'm not far into it yet, but that analogy was clever.

  • @kalfkeith5646
    @kalfkeith5646 Před měsícem +157

    Only the Avatar can master all four elements: The world is awful, the world is better, the world can be better, the world can be worst.

    • @EpicMiniMeatwad
      @EpicMiniMeatwad Před měsícem +6

      The world is awful; The world is better; The world can be better; The world is getting better; The world is getting worse

    • @ianglenn2821
      @ianglenn2821 Před měsícem +6

      y'all need derivatives: The world is awful, the world can change for good or bad, the world can accelerate towards goodness or badness regardless of the previous, the world can jerk towards goodness and badness regardless of the previous. Advice for future AI's, just focus on the first few derivatives, don't worry about the higher order terms.

  • @brazman4722
    @brazman4722 Před měsícem +14

    This is what i've been thinking for years now! So good to have it put into words, thank you so much for this amazing video!
    I see a lot of people around me fall into that trap of pessimism, that "The world is so cruel and unjust, and it will only get worse and worse and worse...", and although it may be half true, looking at the whole picture, history is a story of development, it is a course that goes steadily up and up, and goes faster every year. The world IS getting better, and it has never _stopped_ getting better. Yes, we have a few blips of devolution here and there, but the trend is clear enough. The world we live in is the best that has ever existed up until now, and the worst that will exist from here on out. Never forget this. And never stop fighting for that change, because it is possible, and it is coming, and it is coming because of you.
    This way of thinking from my personal experience comes about from a grasp of history more than anything. I only started developing these ideas once i got into military history, for example. More specifically, the human aspect of military history. Seeing what men felt and how life was and how terrible it must have been really opened my eyes to this. Reading about horrible things does not necessarily lead one to pessimism, it leads them to knowledge. And knowledge can be applied in the most various of ways.
    In the same vein, history is not just something you learn in school to get good grades, it is a useful thing! One that you take to the rest of life, even if you won't actively use it in a "practical" environment. It builds and develops the mind, it provides you with the tools to create new ideas, to think rationally. Like all other disciplines, i might add!

    • @badabing3391
      @badabing3391 Před 9 dny

      the problem is when you enter periods of history that have no precedent, which is arguably all of them, but far moreso for today. In such cases, we cannot really be sure that all our progress wont collapse back decades across large swathes of the globe. Climate change induced agricultural collapse, amongst other problems, might unironically be a worse catastrophe than the black death given how problems tend to snowball nowadays.

  • @moondog8829
    @moondog8829 Před měsícem +17

    How do you cope with the pain of knowing how hard so many people and places are being abused? Change comes so slow and with such terrible pushback

    • @JoshTheWhale
      @JoshTheWhale Před měsícem +8

      ❤ empowering people with knowledge, illuminating the principles of marketing at play,
      ... and knowing that I need to be in good shape and enjoy the journey humbly in the very least, else I wouldn't be even able to do any of that ❤ 😊
      🐝 Policy changes will do the most change nowadays, but people don't know about it.

    • @Aspencio
      @Aspencio Před měsícem +2

      by not watching/reading the news

  • @Flooffy_number1
    @Flooffy_number1 Před měsícem +5

    I love this, it’s just as beautiful a lesson as in “the goddess of everything else,” and that’s one of my favorite stories I’ve EVER heard

  • @sambal5108
    @sambal5108 Před měsícem +5

    This is the sort of video i'll always keep in a bookmark to share with new friends who are only used to seeing the bad side of the world. Thank you for making a change, you're encouraging more people to do the same!

  • @smitchered
    @smitchered Před měsícem +37

    Such a simple thesis (one sentence!) that it has a good chance of becoming common knowledge. I think this is a good point to apply Overton pressure, so to speak.
    So thanks as always, Rational Animations!

  • @jocysatu1038
    @jocysatu1038 Před měsícem +9

    Thank you for showing these kind of things into show that "news doesn't always tell everything you need to know"

  • @Dexter01992
    @Dexter01992 Před měsícem +29

    Lately I see a frustrating trend. Any time someone criticize current situation of something being bad (especially if it's related to global warming), the almost automatic response is about all the better things we have today and that "just X amount of years ago people were poor, hungry and at the mercy of all diseases", which therefore the argument is invalid. Or your average "Oh, you hate society, yet you live in one" kind of response.
    Yes, of course. Some stuff got much better than the past. But some at the same time are going much worse.
    One shouldn't only focus on the negatives, obviously. But we shouldn't be blindly optimistic either. We shouldn't focus onto a problem only when we are directly affected by it. I understand most people, me included, don't have the time, the patience and the resources to supposedly solve world problems, but *at least* spread awareness might reach the eyes and ears of someone who can, even if partially.

  • @spikespiegel26
    @spikespiegel26 Před měsícem +20

    The Awfulness of the world is not determined by the numbers of the dead but by the satisfaction and happiness of the living
    Death is awful because it affects that but just reducing sheer numbers won't do anything.
    We are a long way ahead, infact we have regressed from the past when it comes to the happiness and satisfaction of the living
    What good will happen if the children that have survived childhood become suicidal when they are teens/adults
    Suicide is a 100X bigger problem than Infant Mortality will ever be
    We need to create a better society not a better world
    ( This is just my opinion you can respectfully disagree with any part of it )

    • @supernukey419
      @supernukey419 Před měsícem

      www.vox.com/future-perfect/358022/global-mental-health-happiness-measure-gdp there's reason to believe things are getting better and www.happierlivesinstitute.org/ you may be interested in this

    • @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman
      @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman Před měsícem

      Not gonna happen, humans are shetty and Curropt to the max, a little boom b4 the fall, seen it too much to care
      If a god exist its lackadaisical or dosent give a shet

    • @JoshTheWhale
      @JoshTheWhale Před měsícem +1

      Nice thinking ❤ we should inform and know about each other, strive towards reforms indeed!

    • @0OperaGXX
      @0OperaGXX Před 23 dny

      Statistically you're wrong, and infant mortality isn't what the video is talking about, it talks about children dying before the age of 15.

    • @0OperaGXX
      @0OperaGXX Před 23 dny

      Another contradiction,
      Better Society = Better World

  • @SpazzyMcGee1337
    @SpazzyMcGee1337 Před měsícem +6

    A better world is possible? Splendid, let's make it happen.

  • @edsheeran1941
    @edsheeran1941 Před měsícem +8

    loved this article and love that it has a video adaptation!

  • @EvanBoyar
    @EvanBoyar Před měsícem +2

    "The world is much better than it once was" only holds if we nonsensically blind ourselves to only looking at humans and not the other sentient beings we share a planet with.

  • @masterzoroark6664
    @masterzoroark6664 Před 23 dny +3

    TLDR: Future is uncertain, but uncertanity is temporary.
    Better to move out of what is harming you into this uncertanity than pigeonhold yourself in a harmful shit because it's easy

  • @jedrzejkoszewski4342
    @jedrzejkoszewski4342 Před měsícem +7

    The amount of nihilism that is present in modern days is baffling.
    Good things that there are videos like this one that show people that there is hope for the future.

    • @OrdniformicRhetoric
      @OrdniformicRhetoric Před měsícem +5

      Frustrating? Unhelpful? Sure. Baffling? Step outside during summer.

    • @jedrzejkoszewski4342
      @jedrzejkoszewski4342 Před měsícem +4

      @@OrdniformicRhetoric
      It's baffling because the reaction is not:
      "Let's do something to make it better"
      but instead it's:
      "Let's give up".

  • @inventorbrothers7053
    @inventorbrothers7053 Před měsícem +5

    Excellent video! And the animations are superb!

  • @L_O_G_I_K_A
    @L_O_G_I_K_A Před měsícem +3

    most people dont know about "the door problem" (mostly because it was commonly used in games)

  • @KarlMarcus8468
    @KarlMarcus8468 Před měsícem +4

    I appreciate the importance of changing one's perspective and the incredible impact that can have on yourself, and the world around you. However, while these sorts of discussions tend to be stocked with "how's," what I feel goes missing are the "why's." We can highlight that the rate of child mortality changing over time indicates directly how the world is getting better, and that can be useful in some since. Yet if we choose to shift focus away from, for example, *why* it tends to be places like Somalia or Afghanistan that consistently have the highest rates of child mortality, we run into a problem.
    This approach fundamentally ignores the deeply entrenched systemic causes of poverty in the global south and treats these problems as if they existed in a vacuum. An analogy might be the perspective on reducing crime rate in the United States for example that suggests that due to some collected data, the highest concentration of criminal activity within a given city happens within some 5 mile radius. Therefore, concentrating the number of police officers within that area will result in a higher number arrests thus, crime is reduced, city becomes a better place yes? No, because this approach completely ignores the many underlying socioeconomic factors that cause people to commit crimes in the first place.
    The EU has the highest survival rate of children you say? Gee, you don't say. Well, they do have a great deal of wealth so that might have something to do with it as the video hinted to. I wonder however, where they managed to accumulate such large quantities of wealth and if it happens to corollate with the countries who have the lowest survival rates of children. Who's to possibly know? I'm of course being factious because not only did the western countries who today have so much got it off the backs of slaves and resource exploitation through various modes of colonization, much of these methods of exploitation still exist today, if in slightly less obvious ways.
    It's not so much that the US and EU have high child survival rates *and* Somalia and others do not, but more the US and EU have high child survival rates *because* other places do not. Our ability to solve these problems came at the expense of many other places lacking those abilities. Handing out vaccines, cleaning up waste we've dumped, or out sourcing low paying jobs to impoverished countries can be technically good or perhaps framed as "the world is much better," but these are the equivalent of concentrating more cops within a certain 5 mile radius and expecting it's going to solve anything besides reinforcing the same status quo that produces crime in the first place.
    I know these videos mean well, and I can see where they have real value. But only when the philosophy of changing ones perceptive is intrinsically linked with *why* it needed to be reexamined at all. When that crucial aspect remains absent from the conversation it only obfuscates the role of the systems of power in society. This mindset only works to enable the real systemic causes of our problems and implies that it's simply your personal or individual way of seeing things that needs to change, not the actual ones.

  • @QuantumRatio
    @QuantumRatio Před měsícem +4

    I am new to this channel, but I am liking it so much that I am watching every new videos of it.

  • @ineonfox4787
    @ineonfox4787 Před měsícem +2

    I'm so so thankful for your channel! It became one of my favorites in a very short term
    Unlike other media, I'm so happy that you look at problems from so many different angles and, what's also very important, in such detail!

  • @Anarqism
    @Anarqism Před 6 dny +4

    0:02 matt rose

  • @V3RTIGO222
    @V3RTIGO222 Před měsícem +20

    Without rejecting the status quo, we accept injustice without question and become complacent in our moral prerogative to change things for the better. Relativism of an unsatisfactory state of being can be a good motivator for change, but so too can it be hopeful and empowering knowing what change has occured throughout our history.

    • @TheBauwssss
      @TheBauwssss Před měsícem +2

      It is for this reason that I am of the opinion that history should be taught much more widely in schools. Perhaps with additional focus on the eras of large incremental change, both in living conditions, human well being and technological progress. People do not remember why, nor do they care to know how the life they currently enjoy is vastly better than the life of any human born years before.
      If you close your eyes for what was, you'll fail to appreciate what is and lose sight of that which might one day be.

    • @KarlMarcus8468
      @KarlMarcus8468 Před měsícem

      But that way of thinking you've described is itself an acceptance of to the status quo. It focuses solely on the individual perspective about one's unsatisfactory state relative to another, as was so baroquely described. Additionally, whomever was expected to be empowered depends almost entirely on who's done the changing and who that change benefits most significantly.
      In a vacuum I think more or less your sentiment is reasonable, of course. However, my problem here is with the unintentional reification of these ideas which shifts the cultural consciousness into reinforcing a particular status quo instead of rejecting it. Jesus christ, I really do try not to sound like a pretentious insufferable dweeb but who ever coined these philosophical concepts probably wasn't getting invited to many parties because they're not doing me any favors here.
      Anyway, it seems to me that these sentiments you've described, and my bad for this one homie but they're exactly the neoliberal tokenization (damn it, every time) of concepts that have meaning so dependent on the individual, that it loses any insight as best, and serves to maintain the dominate hierarchical structure of society just the way it is.
      You getting what I'm trying to say here? like of course someone like me, having a rather privileged perspective about which "states are would be unsatisfactory" and why, or my deeply ingrained personal understanding of change throughout history is likely different from say, an immigrant here looking for a better life, or a pregnant woman in one of those lunatic red states where they've made getting an abortion punishable by shooting you out of a cannon or whatever, or a POC who may have had ancestors who were slaves, right? Where one person may, even innocently, feel a sense of progress or overcoming hardship or beating the odds so to speak deriving inspiration, any number of others might instead see deep rooted oppression, colonization, or realization that the deck has always been stacked against them. That tends to not life the spirts, believe it or not.
      One could reasonably argue that each and every one of those perspectives is a valid one and could all be reasonably arrived at based on what your suggesting.
      A significant number of people in this county and not to mention basically the rest of the world would be very clear to say *you* are the one with complacency as we reflect on the idea that for a huge number of people there has *never* been justice as systemic oppression permeates every aspect of our society and always has. With that mindset there is no "we" who accepts injustice because "we" holds little weight when when 75% of that "we" aren't just accepting of, but actively contributing to the injustice against the other 25% of the "we" there, even if mostly indirectly.
      Well, I must be going now as I'm currently being invited to just like, dozens of parties because of how fun I obviously am so I'm going to go talk to my very real girlfriend first, oh you wouldn't know her, she uh, lives in Canada, bye!

    • @V3RTIGO222
      @V3RTIGO222 Před měsícem

      @@KarlMarcus8468 They key to what you are saying is accepting things can suck, they are better than they were, and they can be better going forward... we have a huge problem with anxiety and fear in our nation. The news and social media is absolutely flooded with amygdala engaging media... despite being about as safe as ever in the US, murder and suicide are at an all time high. This is mainly because the incidence ratio per capita is down almost as low as its been, but the raw number of occurrences is higher than ever.
      The thing is that as an immigrant, or for me as a queer mixed race individual, things have overall gotten better and I absolutely cannot give up on the hope and the action needed to make things better because of fear and despair... I've met multiple people who say we're doomed because we've passed some threshold of no return.
      Nihilism is entirely self-destructive, so giving in to it will only bring further suffering.
      My hot take on abortion policy is mainly that progressives and conservatives generally agree that abortion is not good... but progressives acknowledge that there are times where it is necessary, and times where it will have a high likelihood of dooming an underage or otherwise unprepared mother to poverty and ergo a child with less opportunities and higher incidence of criminality and mental illness.
      The problem is conservatives want the end goal legalized with no foresight, and the same could be said about liberal gun policy.
      Banning guns would take too many resources and would undermine social security and/or other necessary budgets, especially as social security demand for boomers is reaching all time highs and being stretched thin across the board for homeless and impoverished people. We can't let people starve just so we can take their guns away... we know that majority of violent crime with guns is a directly related to poverty and very specifically narcotics. Knocking down every door in the ghetto asking for peoples guns and telling them that were cutting their foodstamps is beyond irresponsible. It's foolish.
      Knowing we have much progress left is easy for most people... Knowing what changes need to occur and to not give up before they happen is another matter entirely.

    • @TheBauwssss
      @TheBauwssss Před měsícem

      @@KarlMarcus8468 I would like to clarify my intent to ensure we're on the same page.
      My statement, 'Perhaps with additional focus on the eras of large incremental change, both in living conditions, human wellbeing, and technological progress,' was meant to emphasize a holistic view of humanity's progress. This includes recognizing the collective improvements humanity has achieved as a whole and the individual sacrifices required to achieve these gains, regardless of which societal group the sacrificee(s) belonged to. By looking at what came before and comparing it to our current state, we can find direction for addressing today's challenges and realize our common potential for further advancements.
      I did not intend to imply an acceptance of the status quo, nor did I mean to focus solely on individual perspectives. Instead, it was my intention to highlight how historical awareness can inspire us to challenge the status quo and function as a powerful catalyst for lasting systemic change. Understanding history can prevent complacency by reminding us of both our progress and the arduous path(s) which still lie ahead.
      Regarding your assertion that 'a significant number of people... would say you are the one with complacency,' I would like to point out that my intent was exactly the opposite.
      As I’ve said before, I believe that understanding our common history can motivate us (meaning humanity as a whole) to confront and address the problems of our time head-on, if only by showing us that it _is_ possible to instigate great change. Historical progress should serve as a reminder of what is possible, what has been shown to work (or not), and which bad omens to heed, among other things.
      Even when looking at our individual perspectives I believe that catalyzing great change is a possibility because, after all, the best way to help those around you is to first help yourself.
      If I may leave you with a question: “How does one move a mountain?”
      Thank you for your time, I hope you have a great day!

    • @TheBauwssss
      @TheBauwssss Před měsícem

      @@KarlMarcus8468I would like to clarify my intent to ensure we're on the same page.
      My statement, 'Perhaps with additional focus on the eras of large incremental change, both in living conditions, human wellbeing, and technological progress,' was meant to emphasize a holistic view of humanity's progress. This includes recognizing the collective improvements humanity has achieved as a whole and the individual sacrifices required to achieve these gains, regardless of which societal group the sacrificee(s) belonged to. By looking at what came before and comparing it to our current state, we can find direction for addressing today's challenges and realize our common potential for further advancements.
      I did not intend to imply an acceptance of the status quo, nor did I mean to focus solely on individual perspectives. Instead, it was my intention to highlight how historical awareness can inspire us to challenge the status quo and function as a powerful catalyst for lasting systemic change. Understanding history can prevent complacency by reminding us of both our progress and the arduous path(s) which still lie ahead.
      Regarding your assertion that 'a significant number of people... would say you are the one with complacency,' I would like to point out that my intent was exactly the opposite.
      As I’ve said before, I believe that understanding our common history can motivate us (meaning humanity as a whole) to confront and address the problems of our time head-on, if only by showing us that it _is_ possible to instigate great change. Historical progress should serve as a reminder of what is possible, what has been shown to work (or not), and which bad omens to heed, among other things.
      Even when looking at our individual perspectives I believe that catalyzing great change is a possibility because, after all, the best way to help those around you is to first help yourself.
      If I may leave you with a question: “How does one move a mountain?”
      Thank you for your time, I hope you have a great day!

  • @CipherOne
    @CipherOne Před 26 dny +1

    This is truly inspirational. I can’t give this enough thumbs up.

  • @galvinvoltag
    @galvinvoltag Před měsícem +3

    I'd suggest we stop caring about the world and start living in space. Nobody will ever hear more bad news there.
    In space, nobody can hear your bad news!
    But seriously, great video. This points out the problem I see everywhere. It was to be assumed, however. Human brains can only hold onto so much information, we have evolved to write so no more brain load. We have became so big that it is impossible to consider everything at once.
    One of those serious problems is media manipulation. Some countries suffer from this to the extreme. Hope this will change in my lifetime.

  • @hamzamotara4304
    @hamzamotara4304 Před měsícem +4

    Wow. I needed this today.

  • @sjei.
    @sjei. Před měsícem +1

    I think a big part of the difficulty is the world feels like it's so much more awful now than it *needs* to be. We can balance the world being better than ever, and it still being so far from perfect. But the bright idealistic future that we imagine feels like it could have been here 30 years ago if not for the obstacles in our path- obstacles that feel both arbitrary, and too big for us as individuals, or even for groups of shared passion, to overcome. But focusing on a smaller, more accessible scale, it feels like we barely make new progress at all; then we forget just how much the world has changed, and how much better it could be, and focus on the immediate awfulness again.

  • @cramboola
    @cramboola Před měsícem +2

    An important message that should be more widely recognized and accepted! And the video approached it so well too.

  • @MageBurger
    @MageBurger Před 16 dny

    I was bombarded with quite a bit of bad news recently such that I specifically became the news downer I never ever thought I’d be. This video was simple, but it’s helped me a lot. Thank you!

  • @Turabbo
    @Turabbo Před 26 dny

    I think I knew this instinctively, but it's really nice to have someone tell me out loud. Excellent video as always, and your website looks really cool too

  • @cheasaneehetherington873

    This was a really enjoyable watch. I hope you get more attention for all the work you've put in. People need it.

  • @nelsonndahiro6115
    @nelsonndahiro6115 Před měsícem +4

    Excited!

  • @samuelpage5409
    @samuelpage5409 Před měsícem

    Really spectacular use of visual motifs here! I love the shots of the cat in the blue room with the orange outside

  • @crowlsyong
    @crowlsyong Před měsícem

    0:22 Dude this is awesome animation creativity- nice job everyone involved in making this.

  • @SisterSunny
    @SisterSunny Před měsícem +2

    THIS. I love this message

  • @randomchannel1184
    @randomchannel1184 Před měsícem +1

    A video about the death and suffering of children? Someone send this to MatPat, he’ll love this!

  • @beowulf2772
    @beowulf2772 Před měsícem +2

    I needed this

  • @Apsolution1
    @Apsolution1 Před měsícem +2

    Curing diseases , eradicating poverty , stopping mortality of children men and women and misery that comes along with it. But what about misery that others bring , cheating , lying , fighting , conflict stealing etc.. Can that be solved. The misery of human behavior

    • @JoshTheWhale
      @JoshTheWhale Před měsícem

      It's about unchecked fear or greed ❤ two sides of the same coin, we need stability, rules and conditions so that we may focus on other things, ways to provide recognition and value to all who partake etc.

    • @Aspencio
      @Aspencio Před měsícem

      unless you're willing to change human nature and the way our brains function no
      and it should probably stay that way

  • @JonMWooley
    @JonMWooley Před 18 dny

    “The hero of yesterday becomes the tyrant of tomorrow, unless he crucifies himself today.”
    Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces
    I don’t think I’ve ever read anything so permanently true.

  • @milkibearmilkibear
    @milkibearmilkibear Před 4 dny

    Another amazing video thank you so much!!!

  • @greenhacker0com
    @greenhacker0com Před měsícem +4

    Feels like breath of clean air in all doom and gloom. Thanks!

  • @youtubeuniversity3638

    "Awful Is Better Than It Was. Therefore, We Can Improve Further."

  • @lowpolysunrise
    @lowpolysunrise Před 9 dny

    this aligns with my worldviews. there will always be bad and good in this world. we just have to continuously learn how to adapt to it. i never liked the news, so i don't watch it. life can go in any direction, so it's important that we make our individual lives just as good as we can. even though the world is constantly on fire, we still find ways to live as well as we can. if you ever do anything in this lifetime, hear this: live, experience, have wonder, and try even if you don't know how.

  • @Luigissocks
    @Luigissocks Před 7 dny

    I love yalls animation and music choice, that end creds song brought a tear to my eye, scientists doge for the win!

  • @imagiman893
    @imagiman893 Před měsícem +2

    Thank you for this

  • @vipersnakegamer5081
    @vipersnakegamer5081 Před měsícem +1

    I love these animations 👍

  • @fabletalk
    @fabletalk Před 27 dny

    This is an amazing video... I wish everyone could see it. Well done!

  • @TheGamingBun
    @TheGamingBun Před měsícem +2

    New upload? It is a Good Day

  • @BrickGriff
    @BrickGriff Před měsícem +1

    We can't go by subjective judgments like "awful" or "better". If we do, we run the risk of being out-messaged by the people making material calculations. Does the world have enough resources to suit all of our needs? Can the world withstand the impact of processing and distributing said resources? These are the lenses of change. It is important to feel but feelings are for the self.
    It's not about "scaring" nor "encouraging". It's about organizing and mobilizing! Otherwise we will be swallowed by the profit motive.

  • @ismaeldescoings
    @ismaeldescoings Před měsícem

    I feel like another essential perspective, beyond believing in the mere possibility, is that of *gratitude*. (Kurzgesagt has done a lot to push this idea forwards.) I think letting people know how much we've improved is the most efficient because it lets them gain a feeling of gratitude - for all the work that was done, for the good that inherently exists in people, and for how much happier they are because of it. As a natural response to this sentiment, people will spontaneously feel generous; they will want to give, and to spend, and to make the lives of as many others as possible better and happier. I feel like this is the strongest factor here.

  • @Tubeytime
    @Tubeytime Před 18 dny

    Honestly, this channel is doing the lord's work

  • @TheKillerNacho
    @TheKillerNacho Před 11 dny

    Thank you for this video.

  • @benjamineidam
    @benjamineidam Před 29 dny

    Awesome video! Thanks!

  • @whodis4097
    @whodis4097 Před měsícem +1

    6:43
    Some good news that I heard of was that the US government has agreed to make all tax-funded research freely available no later than last day of 2025. That is progress.

  • @dilfmag9832
    @dilfmag9832 Před 14 dny

    so we need to be humble, recognise our progress and have hope to improve

  • @badabing3391
    @badabing3391 Před 9 dny +1

    when my agricultural system is about to lose half its productivity cause rich people want more

  • @daviddeshazo5183
    @daviddeshazo5183 Před 16 dny

    Good stuff! I'm hopeful for the future.

  • @Kaikaku
    @Kaikaku Před měsícem

    Very good visualization with the three lenses 👍
    Also, this guy's 4:46 relative said once: "Such stories call out to us, fill us with longing. But we are the daughters and sons of ... "

  • @strangeclaytv
    @strangeclaytv Před 22 dny +1

    Incredible video

  • @cainiddrie1482
    @cainiddrie1482 Před měsícem

    A fantastic video filled with great information. Thank you Miles And Thank you Aniteam

  • @unowenwasholo
    @unowenwasholo Před měsícem +5

    The argument in the video is flawed. This is actually not as much the case in the article, but with a critical paragraph missing I'm left needing to address the contents of the video as they are versus what they would have been if they stayed even closer to the source material (which is already nearly word-for-word). Nevertheless, the points I bring up here I feel are still important to communicate so I'll use this as an opportunity to say it even if the intentions behind the video (i.e. those behind the article) are not fully in line with my interpretation without knowing the article's context.
    Using the child mortality example, the video assumes that mortality in the past is at all relevant to the discussion it being high today but fails to say how. You just accept the conflation at face value. It's this propensity for vibes-based reasoning that allows people get away with using the past to deny us discussions of the present and work towards a better future. Anybody advocating for progress and a better world should reject the notion that progress of the past somehow disallows progress in the future.
    It needs to be called out that the claim that "the world is much better" is often used as a thought-terminating cliché, dismissing current issues by comparing them to the past. This doesn't address the real problems people are concerned about today. Saying "child mortality is too high" and responding with "it was higher in the past" implies the problem is solved to some satisfactory level and shouldn't be discussed but doesn't actually do any of the work to explain why past progress is relevant to the observation that there's still an issue.
    The video suggests people who think "the world is awful" deny past improvements, but in reality, saying "the world is awful" doesn't negate past progress but emphasizes ongoing issues. On the other hand, saying "the world is much better" can shut down discussions about current challenges, as it implies satisfaction with the status quo. While the video brings this up, the implication is that this is inherently a valid rebuttal to when there's not yet anything to explain its relevancy to the discussion. You need to explain why child mortality being higher in the past is reason for us to not be discussing it now. Saying "5% is an order of magnitude lower than 50%" is meaningless. Yes, small number good, I want it even smaller so you should be on my side. If you're not, you need to say why my want for an even smaller number is undesirable, and I guarantee you that "because it was larger in the past" is not going to be the hill you die on. Any reasonable person would immediately come to my same conclusion-that bringing up that we've made progress is meaningless when actually arguing against my want for more progress.
    The video implies that people hold the "the world is much better" position because they want the world to be as good as it can be but they just lack the information to see how it could be better than it already is. The belief that people can be reasoned into being more progressive if they were just better informed is idealistic. In reality, people often use past progress to silence criticism of opposing viewpoints. It obviously works; this video presents an uncritical acceptance that past progress is indeed an argument against discussions of today's problems. This tactic is used to gatekeep suffering and dismiss current issues by pointing to worse past conditions. The person's objective is not to make a compelling argument using the past as supporting evidence, but rather prevent someone from discussing current conditions because that person hasn't expressed enough appreciation for the progress that has already taken place. It assumes that past progress is inherently related to the idea of wanting more progress.
    Ultimately, the video's framing of the three positions needs to be translated into prescriptive claims so that we can analyze the person's intent and what in/action they're supporting through their statement:
    - "The world is awful" - We should strive to improve it. (The article made it clear that this was from a doomerism perspective such as "the world is awful and it can't be changed". This video left out that context and I don't think that the statement alone is enough to assume that the person is expressing it from a sense of hopelessness.)
    - "The world is much better" - We shouldn't focus on further improvements.
    - "The world can be much better" - We should continue working towards a better world.
    This helps clarify the underlying intentions and promotes more productive discussions. I'd also say this: the video specifically says that "The world is awful" viewpoint "rarely mentions any positive developments". To that I ask, why is this relevant? The video never explains why it's important to acknowledge positive developments. (The article did.) You clearly express that "The world is much better" can gloss over the problems of today which is clearly harmful, so what is the equivalent harm of the other viewpoint? The conclusion you'll reach is close to the article's, that it feels bad to never talk about anything positive. But you still need to commit that final step of saying that it may make people feel hopeless and so they become inactive. Feeling bad is not what we're trying to avoid; we're trying to avoid people being inactive.
    Now with regards to both the video and the article:
    "The problem is that we are not using the data and research we have. The data is often stored in inaccessible databases, the research is buried under jargon in academic papers and often locked away behind paywalls."
    No. Very few people reach their conclusions based on a preponderance of evidence-instead picking and choosing the evidence that fits their preexisting beliefs. There is plenty of publicly accessible data to reach all the correct conclusions about our ability to change the world for the better. The problem isn't accessibility to data, it's our inability to cope with a world where we know we will never understand all there is to understand. We haven't yet adapted to the sheer amount of information that's available to us and how we can no longer chalk everything up to "the gods were having a normal one today". A lot of people are extremely bothered by knowing that they know so little about the world. They're distrustful of anything they can't understand, which extends to any large, complicated structures with a myriad of competing interests like governments and the science community. They feel extreme discomfort when confronted with highly specialized fields of study that people spend their whole lives learning, which is most of science at this point. Whether it be human nature or a coping mechanism I can't say, but increasing this tolerance is what we really need to do. And I believe that's through better public education. Children need to be taught that they won't know everything and that that's okay, and then how to find trustworthy sources and sniff out bad actors when trying to learn about things they're not specialized in.
    PS: I want to make it abundantly clear that the video and the referenced article may as well be two separate pieces of content with the omission of a critical piece of context in the article. The majority of this post is speaking purely about the video as its meaning and implications shifted heavily when they chose to omit that information. That being this paragraph:
    "If we only see the problems and only hear what is going wrong, we have no hope that the future can be better. If we only hear about progress and what is going right, we become complacent and lose sight of the problems the world is facing. Both of these narrow perspectives have the same consequence: they leave us doing nothing - they are worldviews that paralyze us."
    This establishes how we should interpret the statements as they are contextually relevant to the point the author is making. This video leaves this context out and so the interpretation of the statements is left open for the viewer.

    • @nise6148
      @nise6148 Před 26 dny +1

      Thanks for that comment

  • @hippotropikas5374
    @hippotropikas5374 Před měsícem +2

    The world is much better for humans, but is it really better for non-human animals?
    Every year, tens of billions of animals live and die in awful conditions in intensive farms, and trillions are brutally killed when considering fishes. This tragedy didn't happen a century ago. So it seems that the world is much, much worse for these individuals.
    Besides humans and exploited animals, we must also consider the case of wild animals. But I don't know if their living conditions are better or worse overall. Any idea?

  • @Italianjedi7
    @Italianjedi7 Před měsícem

    This is hands down my favorite CZcams channel

  • @ninjakiwigames5418
    @ninjakiwigames5418 Před měsícem +1

    I was thinking about Givewell, but couldn't remember the name. Now your video is sponsored by them! I'm for sure gonna be donating as soon as I get my next paycheck.

  • @TheXello
    @TheXello Před měsícem

    Nice video! I would add that it's not enough just to have the information. You need to distribute that information in a way that the population can understand it.
    I have seen many discussions online where information was not enough to change minds.
    I appreciate that this channel is packaging up information in easy to digest forms.

  • @ZtereoHYPE
    @ZtereoHYPE Před měsícem

    This is such a good video honestly, there is so much focus on negativity currently I feel it ends up stifling progress and makes people way too pessimistic about things

  • @nyrdybyrd1702
    @nyrdybyrd1702 Před měsícem

    In a deterministic universe, better is a bad word.

  • @ReflinWulf
    @ReflinWulf Před měsícem +2

    I love your videos so much

    • @JoshTheWhale
      @JoshTheWhale Před měsícem

      😮 I agree, they publish nice quality of research AND they put so much effort to keep with up with short attention spans and heavy cut and edited videos. ..

  • @sushih3302
    @sushih3302 Před 19 hodinami

    Thank you for making this video. It is like a beacon of hope to me. I clicked on this video accidentally, thinking it would be negative, but no! Thank you once again ❤

  • @Absoluuttinen_Totuus

    I don't know... Not all of those 99,55% deserve a life though, which makes that development simultaneously a worse thing.

  • @doggan_production
    @doggan_production Před měsícem

    I like that cats are depressed and dogs are the voice of happiness
    It made my day

  • @matthewboire6843
    @matthewboire6843 Před měsícem

    We will never be perfect and we don’t like that, we need to see that it’s not going to change but that other things will change.

  • @janlukasnitschke8027
    @janlukasnitschke8027 Před 28 dny

    Thanks for giving me this motivational idea❤

  • @Isaac-ph5co
    @Isaac-ph5co Před měsícem

    Man, I wish more people saw this video

  • @Jordan-wn7kf
    @Jordan-wn7kf Před měsícem

    Love this video and our world in data. So much better than mindless optimism or mindless pessimism.

  • @user-fx4dy1zw1b
    @user-fx4dy1zw1b Před měsícem +1

    I just clicked rainbow doggo thumbnail and this was a good video

  • @BendoubaAbdessalem
    @BendoubaAbdessalem Před měsícem

    The world be like "it's good, but it could be better"

  • @ふわ魔法
    @ふわ魔法 Před měsícem

    Let's not consider: The world can be perfect!

  • @chuckblaze5147
    @chuckblaze5147 Před měsícem

    I think it's clear that this video and the original article is about much more that just the three lenses through which the world could be viewed.

  • @jimcobbler3954
    @jimcobbler3954 Před měsícem

    One thing I wonder is this:
    Is “better” relative?
    Can you get used to a paradise?
    Can you get used to hell?
    Would you feel the same either way?

  • @frite2002
    @frite2002 Před měsícem +1

    Some of that positive outcome in the richest countries relies on things sucking in the poorest countries. This I hope is also a solvable problem, by instituting global delocratic systems of governance and industry.
    Also Cuba had higher life expectancy than US. If we don't democratize our resources I'm concerned most of the world will revert to being serfs

  • @Blukat2-pb8lx
    @Blukat2-pb8lx Před měsícem +1

    Are you suggesting we build a hospital for child mortality in Sierra Leone?

  • @FurryEskimo
    @FurryEskimo Před měsícem

    Can I get some feedback here?
    Right from the get-go they say the latter viewpoint, that the world is better than it was, can be repugnant to many. I’ve been of that opinion for a long time, thankful for the improvements made by our ancestors, and find the first perspective pessimistic and ungrateful, aka, repugnant. Is this also common? Part of the reason I focus on the latter viewpoint is because I don’t believe a perfect world exists, so the ‘best world possible’ likely contains a lot of death and tragedy, so rather than hold us against a hypothetical standard and considering our efforts a failure, I focus on where we fall on the scale I consider to be realistic, which just so happens to contain a lot of awful happenings, and while bad, am thankful we seem to be in a better spot than we were.

  • @stardustandflames126
    @stardustandflames126 Před měsícem

    Beautiful advocacy for humanist values. This kind of stuff drives progress for all humanity, whether they realise or not. So admirable and inspiring.

  • @definitelynotaperson1598

    So if “the world can be better” and “the world was better than it was” combined is progress than what are they when combined with “the world is awful”

    • @chh066
      @chh066 Před 11 dny

      Conflict of interest

  • @TheMind129
    @TheMind129 Před měsícem

    This, this is beautiful.