Good News, Two Ways

Progress, and Christmas songs.

First, let’s note this.

Vox, Bryan Walsh, 22 Dec 2025: 2025 felt like a disaster — but the numbers tell a very different story, subtitled “From a CRISPR baby to a closing ozone hole, 5 actually good things from 2025.”

A recurring theme. Social media and the news highlight the bad things going on in the world, because people are psychologically attuned to potential danger. The error is in assuming just because bad things still happen, that the world is headed toward ruin. There’s plenty of good news, in various kinds of progress, if you pay attention to it.

Actually, the real error is letting that impression guide your political choices. There are always demagogues out there ready to play to your fears and promise a return to a glorious past.

2025 is just about in the books, and the reviews are in: It sucked.

Over at the subreddit r/decadeology, you can check out a long, long thread of redditors submitting reasons why 2025 was, in the words of the first post, “a long, disappointing year.” War in Gaza, vibecessions, chaos in the White House, growing AI fears, scientists slashed, anti-vaccination on the rise — it’s like someone took Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” and asked a large-language model to update the lyrics. I mean, the Economist’s word of the year for 2025 was “slop.” As in, the content slop, much of it AI-generated, that has spread across the internet like black mold. That is not the sign of a good year.

The piece discusses these five stories:

  1. The CRISPR baby
  2. The bad trends are falling
  3. We’re losing weight and drinking less
  4. We’re closing the ozone hole
  5. It’s not 536 AD

This is all consistent with the themes of the two big Steven Pinker books I’ve summarized here recently.

On the last item:

The surest way to feel optimistic about the state of the world is often less about how good the present is than how bad — how terribly, unimaginably bad — most of the past was. And few years in the past were worse than 536 AD, the year Science magazine once memorably called “the worst year to be alive.”

What was so bad about it? Well, a fog plunged Europe, the Middle East, and even parts of Asia into a noontime darkness for 18 months. Average temperatures in the summer fell by as much as 2.5 C, beginning what would become the coldest decade of the past 2,300 years. Harvests failed across much of the world, leading to widespread starvation. Oh, and the scene was set for the Plague of Justinian, an outbreak of bubonic plague that began in Egypt and ultimately killed one-third to one-half of the population of the eastern Roman Empire.

Due to an enormous volcanic eruption. Concluding:

So yeah, however bad you think 2025 was, I can tell you that 536 AD was way, way worse. But really, that’s true of nearly all the years of the past, when humans were poorer, less free, were more subject to violence, died sooner, and generally had to endure lives that were “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short,” in the words of Thomas Hobbes.

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A second meaning of “good news,” of course, is what Christians call news of the birth and life of Jesus. And so I’ll take the opportunity to record here a thought I had some time ago, concerning Christmas carols. There are at least two subgenres of Christmas songs, secular and religious. I have no problem with the secular songs, which these days are probably the more popular. White Christmas, Winter Wonderland, Sleigh Ride, and so on and on. But I have a thought about the religious ones, especially those that purport to portray events right around the birth of Jesus. So I’m randomly scanning some lists on the web, e.g.

Parade, 24 Dec 2025: We’ve Got 25 of the Best Religious Christmas Songs—Go Tell It on the Mountain

My thought is this. Despite a few details in the gospels (the putative three wise men, etc.), there is not a lot about Jesus’ birth, and virtually nothing about his childhood or adulthood until he began preaching. If knowledge was so common at his birth — just listen to all those carols: Away in a Manger, O Holy Night, Joy to the World (“the lord is come!”), It Came Upon a Midnight Clear, and on an on — why wasn’t Jesus guarded over and protected for his entire life? Why no stories about his childhood in the gospels? Compare the Dalai Lama, where IIRC as the current one ages, a new boy is “discovered” to be his successor, and taken away from his mundane life and raised in the temples and trained into the way of his new life. If the world heard the news, as in these Christmas songs, that the savior of the world was being born, why didn’t anyone pay more attention to him as he grew up? Why did none of those accounts survive the centuries until the gospels were written down?

Well, of course, because they’re just stories. Retcons, in a sense; or artifacts of a massive vicarious RPG. Or simple fantasies.

Posted in progress, Religion | Comments Off on Good News, Two Ways

Steady Encroachment

Quick takes today.

Robert Reich, 22 Dec 2025: Farewell to “60 Minutes”, subtitled “It just went the way of the Washington Post’s editorial page”

Once you begin surrendering to Trump, he always wants more. You can’t appease a tyrant.

David Ellison’s CBS — after gutting DEI policies there, appointing right-wing hack Kenneth R. Weinstein to a new “ombudsman” role, and making anti-“woke” opinion journalist Bari Weiss editor-in-chief of CBS News (despite her lack of experience in either broadcasting or newsrooms) — yesterday removed a segment from “60 Minutes” featuring stories of Venezuelan men deported by the Trump administration to what the program called a “brutal” prison in El Salvador. Bari Weiss had demanded changes to the segment.

The Ellisons — fils et père — have been seeking Trump’s support for their hostile bid to acquire Warner Bros Discovery, but Trump has been unhappy with recent episodes of “60 Minutes,” even under its new management. Hence, the segment’s removal.

That’s how these people work.

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And this.

The Atlantic, Adam Serwer, 23 Dec 2025: Cancel Culture’s Boomerang Effect subtitled “How we got to a place where free speech means whatever conservatives want to say”

On Sunday night Bari Weiss, the editor of The Free Press and the new head of CBS News, abruptly stopped a forthcoming 60 Minutes report on the torture endured by migrants in the brutal El Salvadoran prison CECOT, where the Trump administration has sent more than 280 men.

Trump supporters praised the decision from Weiss, who, notwithstanding her description of conditions at CECOT as “horrific,” had previously praised El Salvadoran leader Nayib Bukele for making El Salvador safer. More broadly, the whole affair neatly encapsulates the bizarre anti-free-speech free-speech discourse of the past decade, the purpose of which has been to justify restricting any speech that conservatives disapprove of while framing liberal censoriousness as equivalent to state censorship.

Earlier examples with lots of links:

Weiss has long been a vocal supporter of a curiously narrow definition of free speech. That hypocrisy, shared by many, brought us to where we are today: Nasty tweets were a harbinger of incipient totalitarianism, but now the Trump administration is trying to imprison and deport people for pro-Palestinian advocacy, and it’s fine. The “PC Police” were trying to “outlaw make-believe,” but when Republican states ban books from schools and public libraries, it’s fine. These dumb lefties believe that words are violence, but when the federal government says left-wing speech is violence worthy of firing or prosecution, it’s fine. Protests on college campuses were a national crisis, but now that the federal government wants to ensure that entire universities comply with right-wing ideology when it comes to whom they hire, what they teach, and whom they admit, it’s fine.

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The Week, 23 Dec 2025: Trump unveils new ‘Trump class’ US warships

Everything must be named after himself. He has no shame. But here’s a pertinent bit of the summary here:

“This ship is never going to sail,” Mark Cancian, a military expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told The Washington Post. He predicted it would “take four, five, six years” to just develop the ship.

Just like someone predicted that ballroom will never be built. (Also, whatever happened to that Wall?)

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And this:

JMG (from Fortune): Trump: I’m Designing Ships, I’m Very Aesthetic Person.

To which I say: Dunning-Kruger.

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Two more:

JMG, (from Raw Story): Trump: I’m Bringing Down Drug Prices By 3000%

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Friendly Atheist, 23 Dec 2025: Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders turned a holiday email to state employees into a Christian sermon, subtitled “Sanders’ proclamation violated the idea of church/state separation by treating Christian doctrine as state policy”

My thought about such events: are Christians like her dim (because they don’t understand separation of church and state) or simply arrogant (thinking only their religion matters)?

Posted in authoritarianism, Lunacy, Politics, Religion | Comments Off on Steady Encroachment

Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 6

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Posts about this book: Post 1; Post 2Post 3Post 4Post 5; Post 6.

The final chapter considers humanism as the agent for deploying reason and science and thus producing progress. Pinker defines humanism, considers why some oppose it, and explores the two main alternatives: religion, and authoritarianism, with a particular call-out against the ideas of Nietzsche. As he sums up, Pinker warns against blaming problems (which will always occur) on evildoers, wrecking institutions, and “empowering a leader who will restore the country to its rightful greatness.” Finally, he closes with a page-long summary of the story of human progress: the crooked timber of human nature with its resources to redeem its flaws; how we combine ideas recursively and spread them with language and developed norms and institutions of reason; how we’re penetrating the mysterious of the cosmos; how the human condition has greatly improved, and how this is a heroic story that is true, because we have reasons to believe it.

*

Ch 23, Humanism

We need more than science to bring about progress—we need guidance to determine which things to achieve. The goal of maximizing human flourishing can be called humanism (which doesn’t exclude animals), which has had three manifestos since 1933. (They’re here at Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanist_Manifesto) The third in 2003 has items, listed p410-411. Oddly, humanism is opposed by many, not just the religious and political, but by artists and intellectuals p412.4.

A key principle is impartiality, which underlies a list of other attempts to construct morality on rational grounds, p412.7. But we need deeper grounds. We can recall our existence as reasoners in a world of entropy and evolution; individuals are often at cross-purposes with each other, and so morality or wisdom is about balancing such conflicts. That we are so vulnerable to violence we prefer to engage in argument, and thus we develop moral codes that apply to everyone who can think. Thus sympathy in many forms evolves in an expanding circle.

Humanism isn’t merely the same as utilitarianism, which has problems, 415b, but it has fewer problems that deontological ethics, 416t i.e. principles deemed moral or not by their very nature, often as defined by God. Problems there include, who says? At various times various things have been deemed immoral by their very nature – list 416.7 (vaccination, life insurance, interracial marriage, etc.).

Anyway utilitarian principles often work, and have impressive results. It’s useful if any such principle is ‘thin’ i.e. easily appreciated. Joshua Greene points out that deontological convictions are rooted in primitive notions of tribalism, purity, revulsion, and social norms, whereas utilitarian concerns results from rational cognition. [[ Yes ]] P417.8 Also, when people from diverse backgrounds converge, they settle on such principles; thus the separation of church and state, and the universal human rights declared by the UN.

There are two perennial alternatives: theistic morality, and romantic heroism.

First, religion. Will it always push back? Is the enlightenment just a fad?

The problem with religion is, first, that there’s no good reason to believe that God exists. All the arguments have been refuted. (E.g. in an appendix in that Goldstein novel). P421. Some argue that science has no business on these matters, or imagine various escape hatches; but Coyne (in Faith vs Fact) points out that many religious claims are perfectly testable hypotheses, 422. Other claims, such as an immortal soul, might also have evidence in its favor; but none exists (rather 422.7 “The fact that these reports have all been exposed as tall tales, false memories, over-interpreted coincidences, and chap carny tricks undermines the hypothesis that there are immaterial souls which could be subject to divine justice.”)

And so the scope of religious claims has shrunk; the ‘god of the gaps’. There are two areas still cited.

First, the so-called fine-tuning of the physical constants. Cf Rees book. P423. Problem of theodicy: why did God design a universe with such misery? And there are plenty of ideas to explain these: we may not understand physics sufficiently; there may be a multiverse. Our ‘queasiness’ at the idea is no guide to its possible truth, 424b. A multiverse might be a simpler explanation than any alternative.

Second, the so-called ‘hard’ problem of consciousness. The ‘easy’ problem is 426t. The hard problem is an enigma. Dennett claims there is no hard problem; author agrees 427.7. Perhaps there are some concepts beyond human ken, 427.9 [sf connection here]. Colin McGinn; Ambrose Bierce. And appealing to a ‘soul’ is no help; it posits a bigger mystery, paranormal phenomena, that don’t seem to exist. 428m.

The second problem with religion is that it can’t be a source of morality. Goes back to Plato. Numerous OT examples, 429t. It’s religion that’s relativisitic, and can be immoral in its directives, 429.7. Steven Bannon’s claims are dunce-cap history, 430t.

Sophisticated people may not believe in heaven, hell, etc., but react against the ‘new atheist’ authors. Do any of their possible flaws implicate humanism? Faitheists claim that religion is necessary, 431t, but is this true? We understand the psychological origins of religion, but as with nationalism, this is a vulnerability, not a necessity. So we evaluate religions on their own grounds. Yes they’ve made positive contributions. But the benefits of religion are more about community than about supernatural beliefs. And its obstructions are harmful, e.g. political movements against various ends, 432.6. And evangelicals supported Trump, p 432.9:

In 2016 there was a brief hope that the Christian virtues of humility, temperance, forgiveness, propriety, chivalry, thrift, and compassion toward the weak would turn Evangelicals against a casino developer who was vainglorious, sybaritic, vindictive, lewd, misogynistic, ostentatiously wealthy, and contemptuous of the people he called “losers.” But no: Donald Trump won the votes of 81 percent of white Evangelicals…

What about religion’s wisdom on great questions? Dennett calls this a deepity. The opposite of religion is not science, but the entirety of human knowledge and reason. And religious wisdom is often shallow and archaic. Spirituality? Oprah’s claim that there are no coincidences; Amy Schumer and Bill Nye making fun of the idea of a universal force. p434b:

A “spirituality” that sees cosmic meaning in the whims of fortune is not wise but foolish. The first step toward wisdom is the realization that the laws of the universe don’t care about you. The next is the realization that this does not imply that life is meaningless, because people care about you, and vice versa. You care about yourself, and you have a responsibility to respect the laws of the universe that keep you alive, so you don’t squander your existence. Your loved ones care about you, and you have a responsibility not to orphan your children, widow your spouse, and shatter your parents. And anyone with a humanistic sensibility cares about you, not in the sense of feeling your pain – human empathy is too feeble to spread itself across billions of strangers – but in the sense of realizing that your existence is cosmically no less important than their, and that we all have a responsibility to use the laws of the universe to enhance the conditions in which all can flourish.

But is religion pushing back? People are hostile to the word ‘atheist’, which they equate with amorality, but surveys increasingly show decrease in religious alliances. The consequences of affluence and education. One sixth of the world is now ‘none’. That people think there’s a religious resurgence might be an effect of two things: religious people have more babies; and the religious vote more often.

And America is an outlier; de Toqueville. And yet the nones are rising, to 25% today.

There are numerous reasons why the world is losing its religion; the main one being reason itself, the observation that the teachings of religion aren’t true. The correlations among religious belief and happiness and well-being are established among countries, and among states in the US.

What about Islam? The Islamic world is sitting out progress, and is the locus of wars and terror in the modern world. The religion itself isn’t to blame; the Islamic world was once the center of learning, ahead of the West. Yet it is partly due to religion – the Quran is full of harsh statements about outsiders and beliefs. Most are very religious; there has been no equivalent of the Enlightenment; no separation of church and state. Apologists in the West suggest that the region can’t progress. Yet pockets are.

The second threat to humanism is authoritarianism, or nationalism, populism, fascism. The single thinker who represents the opposite of humanism would be Nietzsche – description of his thinking, 444, all about the ‘overman’ who achieves glory through heroism, and defeating the common masses; it hails to the heyday of the warriors of the Greeks and Vikings, and feels corrupted by Christianity and the enlightenment. Quotes.

These thoughts inspired the two world wars, 445. Yet he is still admired among intellectuals and artists. Why? Perhaps because those people respond to the idea that they are special, more worthy of living than the masses who consume mass entertainment, 447. Lists of admirers – 446. And the appeal of other dictators, 447. And thus, even an intellectual root for Trump, 448.

Two ideologies have derived from N: fascism, defined 448m, the idea that the individual is a myth and identity derives from culture, bloodline, and homeland. This is currently justified by appeal to evolutionary psychology and group selection, 448.

And the reactionary ideology of ‘theoconservatism’, 448b. The idea that Enlightenment values have led to a tepid society, which must be restored – via Christian values. The irony is that this is analogous to radical Islam, which is so feared; “with its horror of modernity and progress.” 449.7

But the case for this is intellectually bankrupt, 450. The idea that humans have an innate imperative to identify with a nation state is bad evolutionary psychology; it confuses vulnerability with need. There are many ways to identify with a tribe, 450m.

And ethnic uniformity does *not* lead to cultural excellence; thus vibrant cultures grow through interaction with other cultures, cf. Sowell and Diamond, 450b. And recall why international institutions arose; the struggle between nation states in the 19th and early 20th centuries didn’t work out. Thus the UN, and human rights.

The appeal of regressive ideas is perennial, and the case for reason, science, humanism, and progress always has to be made; beware thinking

that every problem is an outrage that calls for blaming evildoers, wrecking institutions, and empowering a leader who will restore the country to its rightful greatness.

Finally, Pinker ends with a page-long summary of “the story of human progress”, p452-3:

We are born into a pitiless universe, facing steep odds against life-enabling order and in constant jeopardy of falling apart. We were shaped by a force that is ruthlessly competitive. We are made from crooked timber, vulnerable to illusions, self-centeredness, and at time astounding stupidity.

Yet human nature has also been blessed with resources that open a space for a kind of redemption. We are endowed with the power to combine ideas recursively, to have thoughts about our thoughts. We have an instinct for language, allowing us to share the fruits of our experience and ingenuity. We are deepened with the capacity for sympathy — for pity, imagination, compassion, commiseration.

These endowments have found ways to magnify their own power. The scope of language has been augmented by the written, printed, and electronic word. Our circle of sympathy has been expanded by history, journalism, and the narrative arts. And our puny rational faculties have been multiplied by the norms and institutions of reason: intellectual curiosity, open debate, skepticism of authority and dogma, and the burden of proof to verify ideas by confronting them against reality.

As the spiral of recursive improvement gathers momentum, we eke out victories against the forces that grind us down, not least the darker parts of our own nature. We penetrate the mysteries of the cosmos, including life and mind. We live longer, suffer less, learn more, get smarter, and enjoy more small pleasures and rich experiences. Fewer of us are killed, assaulted, enslaved, oppressed, or exploited by the others. From a few oases, the territories with peace and prosperity are growing, and could someday encompass the globe. Much suffering remains, and tremendous peril. But ideas on how to reduce them have been voiced, and an infinite number of others are yet to be conceived.

We will never have a perfect world, and it would be dangerous to seek one. But there is no limit to the betterments we can attain if we continue to apply knowledge to enhance human flourishing.

This heroic story is not just another myth. Myths are fictions, but this one is true — true to the best of our knowledge, which is the only truth we can have. We believe it because we have reasons to believe it. As we learn more, we can show which parts of the story continue to be true, and which ones false-as any of them might be, and any could become.

And the story belongs not to any tribe but to all of humanity — to any sentient creature with the power of reason and the urge to persist in its being. For it requires only the convictions that life is better than death, health is better than sickness, abundance is better than want, freedom is better than coercion, happiness is better than suffering, and knowledge is better than superstition and ignorance.

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Comments:

  • I’ve followed the debate over the decades about whether “group theory” is valid, invalid, or simply unnecessary. Wilson stuck to it his entire career, even aligning individual selection (selfishness) with sin, group selection (concern for others) with virtue. What I didn’t realize until going through this book again is that the resistance to group selection may be its apparent support for nationalistic ideas, that one nation or race is superior to another. That would explain the distaste for the idea, but doesn’t necessarily impugn its validity.
  • About Nietzsche. Here again his ‘superman’ idea aligns with authoritarian nationalism, Pinker notes. Does the music in 2001, by Richard Strauss and based on Neitzsche’s “Also Sprach Zarathustra,” reflect on the movie and Clarke’s novel at all? I would say it’s analogous, but not an endorsement.
Posted in Book Notes, Steven Pinker | Comments Off on Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 6

Government Suppression, and Dr. Noc

  • CBS, now controlled by a Trump acolyte, pulled a story from last night’s 60 Minutes at the last moment;
  • Dr. Noc on Facebook, a new reliable source;
  • Short items about Trump’s favorite excuse, Republicans again taking credit for funding due to Biden, Trump’s antipathy toward wind farms, why Denmark’s vaccine schedule won’t work in the US, and how Christians resist following civil law.
– – –

The big news today is how CBS just pulled a story from last night’s 60 Minutes, a story that criticized the Trump administration’s deportment policy, at the last minute. Because control of CBS has been given over to a Trump supporter. Something similar is also happening at CNN, apparently. Because the Trump-supporting billionaires are buying up the big, formerly independent, media outlets.

NY Times, 21 Dec 2025: 60 Minutes’ Pulled a Segment. A Correspondent Calls It ‘Political.’, subtitled “Sharyn Alfonsi, a ’60 Minutes’ correspondent, criticized the network’s decision to remove her reporting from Sunday’s edition of the show.”

In a move that drew harsh criticism from its own correspondent, CBS News abruptly removed a segment from Sunday’s episode of “60 Minutes” that was to feature the stories of Venezuelan men deported by the Trump administration to what the program called a “brutal” prison in El Salvador.

CBS announced the change three hours before the broadcast, a highly unusual last-minute switch. The decision was made after Bari Weiss, the new editor in chief of CBS News, requested numerous changes to the segment. CBS News said in a statement that the segment would air at a later date and “needed additional reporting.”

But Sharyn Alfonsi, the veteran “60 Minutes” correspondent who reported the segment, rejected that criticism in a private note to CBS colleagues on Sunday, in which she accused CBS News of pulling the segment for “political” reasons.

“Our story was screened five times and cleared by both CBS attorneys and Standards and Practices,” Ms. Alfonsi wrote in the note, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times. “It is factually correct. In my view, pulling it now, after every rigorous internal check has been met, is not an editorial decision, it is a political one.”

Other takes:

Jerry Coyne, Why Evolution Is True, 22 Dec 2025: And so it begins: Bari Weiss gets a “60 Minutes” segment pulled from the show

CNN, 22 Dec 2025: CBS shelves ‘60 Minutes’ story on Trump deportees at the last minute: ‘People are threatening to quit,’ staffers say, via JMG: CBS Scrubs “60 Minutes” Expose On Migrant Abuses

Yet the pulled piece aired in Canada.

Axios: Yanked “60 Minutes” episode aired in Canada

 

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Let me highlight this. Another candle in the dark. I’ve been seeing this guy on Facebook. I see lots of folks on Facebook, but it seems like he’s a real deal. Here he is taking on RFK Jr.’s misinformation. (Click the full-screen icon to see his data charts.)

NY Times, 19 Dec 2025: Can Science Win on Social Media? Ask Dr. Noc., subtitled “Morgan McSweeney’s TikTok crusade against White House health policies has made him a star. It’s not a job he ever wanted.”

Here’s his feed on Facebook: Good Vibes and Science.

From NYT:

Morgan McSweeney shouldn’t be a TikTok sensation.

The algorithms don’t reward lectures on the finer points of medical science. They don’t elevate fact-checkers over misinformation. And they generally don’t make stars out of earnest goofballs in button-downs and Clark Kent glasses.

But Dr. Noc, as he is known on TikTok and Instagram, has built an audience of more than four million followers anyway. With a style somewhere between a high school chemistry teacher and a youth minister, he has made a name for himself with silly dances and vaccine explainers.

“He’s sort of like a new Bill Nye,” said Sherry Pagoto, the director of the University of Connecticut Center for mHealth and Social Media. “He threads the needle, to be credible but engaging and informative.”

Dr. McSweeney, 33, who has a Ph.D. in immunology and a day job in biotech, started posting short, sometimes awkward, science videos during the pandemic to beat lockdown boredom. He soon found a more serious niche answering questions about the coronavirus.

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Short items.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Science | Comments Off on Government Suppression, and Dr. Noc

Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 5

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Posts about this book: Post 1; Post 2Post 3Post 4; Post 5. Expanded below.

Part I of this book outlined the ideas of the Enlightenment; Part II showed how those ideas worked. Part III defends the three other themes of this book against surprising enemies.

This post covers two of the three chapters in Part III.

The chapter on Reason addresses questions of why, since we *can* reason, we are so easily led into folly. Not so much from ignorance as affiliations with religions or other ideologies, and motivated reasoning, in-group thinking. Conservatives seem to doubt progress is even desirable, let alone possible; the certainties of traditional Christendom are preferable; Pinker rejects this resoundingly. But the left too rejects caricatures of certain ideas. Key idea: the test of empirical rationality is prediction. Some pundits are always wrong. And conservative politics is increasingly know-nothing. How to improve reasoning powers? Teach critical thinking, but it has to be hands-on teaching.

The chapter on Science exalts it as “the proudest accomplishment of our species.” Why the disdain, even from intellectuals? The fear of ‘scientism,’ the idea that science can have anything to say about CP Snow’s second culture, the humanities. But the practices of science are designed to make up for the flaws of individual human beings, and to rely on two key ideas: the world is intelligible, and we allow the world to tell us whether our ideas about it our correct. Most people are happy to accept the practical benefits of science, but reject science’s implications about the lack of truth of the world’s traditional religions and cultures — with quotes of two long paragraphs about what we know about the world through science, how many traditional ideas, from fate and karma to answered prayers, simply aren’t true, and how this underlying scientific understanding of the world necessarily grounds our approach to morality and our responsibility to take care of ourselves and our planet. With final comments about how science is treated in academia, how opponents resist quantification in favor of intuition, and how ideas of E.O. Wilson’s consilience offer more hope than the pre-Darwinian, pre-Copernican worldviews of people like Leon Wieseltier.

(Expanded Posts about this book; Post 1 (Preface); Post 2 (Part I, the first three chapters, on the book’s four themes, and about entropy, evolution, and information, and about counter-Enlightenments); Post 3, covering seven chapters in the central section of the book about Progress; Post 4, covering the remaining chapters about Progress, with some long quotes about the value of knowledge and education; Post 5, covering two themes, Reason and Science, in the last section of the book, with some long quotes about how people accept the practical benefits of science, but reject its implications about the truths of their religions and cultures and morals.)

Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Steven Pinker | Comments Off on Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 5

An Antebellum Constitution, Christianity, and Christmas

  • Adam Serwer on how conservatives want an Antebellum Constitution;
  • David French on why Christianity is a dangerous faith;
  • Nicholas Kristof and Bart Ehrman on what Jesus would think of Christmas 2025.
– – –

Undoing progress and dragging us back to the past.

The Atlantic, Adam Serwer, 21 Dec 2025: Conservatives Want the Antebellum Constitution Back, subtitled “The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are in trouble.”

Last July, while on his way to his job as a security guard at a cannabis farm in California, George Retes was tear-gassed, pepper-sprayed, and arrested by federal agents conducting an immigration raid. The agents ignored the license plate on Retes’s car and the sticker on his windshield, both of which identified him as a U.S. Army veteran, and did not even bother to determine whether he was a citizen before strip-searching him and locking him up in a cell. Retes was detained overnight without any opportunity to call a lawyer or his family.

This is where we are now: living in a police state run by white supremacist xenophobes, using ICE operatives drawn from the most thuggish elements of society.

Across the country, federal agents are flagrantly and casually disregarding Americans’ due-process rights. And they have been remarkably forthright about how they choose their victims. As Gregory Bovino, a top Border Patrol commander, told a white reporter: Agents were arresting people based on “the particular characteristics of an individual—how they look. How do they look compared to, say, you?”

And laying the blame on the current Supreme Court.

The Constitution of the Roberts Court is not color-blind. It is a Constitution that permits discrimination on the basis of race, but forbids alleviating discrimination on the basis of race. And over the next year, the Court will face more cases that could further erode both the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, pushing America back toward what some on the right believe is the true, Antebellum Constitution.

The Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments make up the Civil War and Reconstruction amendments. The Thirteenth abolished slavery except as punishment for a crime, but America needed to do more to prevent the resurgence of the slave-owning South’s caste-based society. The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments enshrined in the Constitution principles of universal male suffrage, nondiscrimination, and nonracial (birthright) citizenship. Although imperfect—the vote for women was not included—they were a crucial first step toward ensuring that the rights conferred by American citizenship would remain inviolate no matter where you were, and no matter who you were.

The article goes on: conservatives have fought back, all the way up to Charlie Kirk.

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A remarkably frank essay from David French.

NY Times, David French, 21 Dec 2025: Christianity Is a Dangerous Faith

Religion is one of the most dangerous forces on earth.

If you’ve ever encountered true fundamentalists, you know why. When you combine eternal stakes with absolute certainty, it produces the kind of people who are happy to be cruel in the name of God.

These two sentences sum it up. But of course there’s more.

In fact, they can view their cruelty as a form of kindness. If they treat you with decency, doesn’t that make you comfortable in your sin? It’s important for them to take opportunities to confront people when you can — in other words, to tell people that they’re wrong, often in the most strident of ways. How else will they understand the gravity of their own sin?

To the fundamentalist, disagreement is proof of apostasy. But it can be even worse than that — if you’re wrong, then you might lead other people into error, and that makes you dangerous.

That’s one reason fundamentalists of all stripes are often such zealous censors. A fundamentalist can see every person who’s wrong as a kind of Patient Zero in a potential pandemic of paganism. And don’t think for a moment that fellow believers are spared the fundamentalists’ ire. They’re a chief target. They have no excuse for their errors, and they receive the most vitriol of all.

He goes on to talk about the Christmas story. I’ve gift-linked the article; it’s worth reading. The implications of the Jesus story. And why religion is still dangerous.

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Here is Bart Ehrman, a “New Testament scholar” and author of many books, including a couple I’ve actually read. This goes to why so many people cling to the Jesus story, while acting in ways contrary to what Jesus said.

NY Times, Nicholas Kristof, 20 Dec 2025: What Would Surprise Jesus About Christmas 2025?

[Kristof] You have a new book coming out soon, “Love Thy Stranger,” arguing that Jesus taught a revolutionary message that transformed Western moral thinking. What was that message?

[Ehrman] The heart of Jesus’ message is that loving “others” means caring not only for family and friends but even for strangers — whoever is in need, whether we know them or whether they are like us. This kind of altruism was not promoted — or even accepted — in the Greek and Roman worlds that Jesus came out of. But it is a view that completely transformed the thinking and ethical priorities of the Western world down till today.

And

If Jesus were to time-travel and show up for Christmas 2025, what would surprise him the most?

I don’t think Jesus would recognize Christianity today. The idea that he was a pre-existent divine being who came into the world as a newborn is not found in any of his own teachings in our earliest Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke, and I think he would be flabbergasted to hear it.

Because stories aren’t about truth.

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Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 4

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Here are the remaining ten chapters in the long middle section of the book that focuses on Progress. Some of these update topics from BETTER ANGELS, and remind of us to take statistical approaches to safety, terrorism, and so on. Beware headlines; look at the data. Overall, liberal values are spreading around the world. The chapter on Knowledge has two great quotes about the value of education and the awareness of one’s place in the world. Two chapters consider, if things have gotten so much better, why aren’t we happier? And concludes that the evidence we’re unhappy is unpersuasive, and the reason we’re not happier is due to humanity’s gradual maturity in an ever-more complex world. A chapter on existential threats finds most such risks unlikely. And a chapter on the future of progress worries about two threats: economic stagnation, and the rise of authoritarian populism, on the latter point specifically addressing the danger Trump represents to all the good news from the previous chapters. Recommendations: rely on the resilience of the American system; recognize that Trump voters are of the lower classes with low educations, who are older and more religious. So avoid polarizing rhetoric, and fix the election system. There will always be setbacks, but there’s a dialectic that nevertheless moves us forward.

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Frogs, Religion, the Ballroom, Bigotry, and Dictators

  • Trump’s relative isolationism: big frog in a small pond.
  • The obvious reasons people are walking away from organized religion;
  • Short takes on the White House ballroom, surging bigotry on the right, and Trump’s alignment with history’s worst dictators.
– – –

Count on Fareed Zakaria for some perspective.

Washington Post, Fareed Zakaria, 19 Dec 2025: Trump’s doctrine is ‘Make America Small Again’, subtitled “A hemispheric focus makes little sense for a global economic and military giant.”
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Kindergarten Anthropology, and Ordering Things Into Existence

  • A Facebook response to the question of where morality comes from;
  • Franklin Graham admits that God is a God of War;
  • Trump thinks he can order nuclear fusion into existence, and order a Moon landing in 2028.
– – –

There are groups on Facebook that I don’t actually follow, but whose posts I keep seeing because I tend to click on those kinds of posts, and of course Facebook notices. Here’s such a post today, that I think worth quoting.

It goes to the question, where do your morals come from if not from God? Or Bible? Or Ten Commandments? I’ve commented on this idea many times, noting especially that people do not, in fact, have to look up their list of rules to know whether something is bad or not (they know it intuitively), and that people in nations that do not follow the Bible or Christianity are not, in fact, immoral or amoral. And furthermore, that politicians are obsessed with posting the Ten Commandments in schools while completely ignoring the many things Jesus said.

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Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 3

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Here are the first seven of the 17 chapters in the long middle section of the book.  The first one about “Progressophobia,” covers a range of familiar reasons from cognitive psychology why people think the past was better than the present, and the present is a mess.  Topics about life, health, sustenance, etc., are addressed simply by looking at the data (as in the later Rosling book, reviewed here). Then come two topics, inequality and the environment, about which I’m not as sanguine, in 2025, as Pinker was in 2017 when he was writing this book. As even-handed as Pinker tries to be, since he wrote the Trump administrations have steadily tried to make everything worse.

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