Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The world is getting better, but the Enlightenment (alone) won’t save us
The world is getting better, but the Enlightenment (alone) won’t save us
Jul 4, 2026 9:12 PM

Global poverty is on the decline. Innovation and exploration continue to accelerate. Freedom and opportunity are expanding across the world. Meanwhile, political pundits and chin-stroking “experts” continue to preach of our impending doom.

Why so much pessimism in a prosperous age?

“I have found that intellectuals hate progress and intellectuals who call themselves ‘progressive’ really hate progress,” says Steven Pinker, author of the new book, Enlightenment Now. “Now, it’s not that they hate the fruitsof progress, mind you…It’s the ideaof progress that rankles the chattering class.”

In a recent TED Talk, Pinker explores our cultural preference for pessimism and teases the primary themes of his book, offering prehensive, data-driven case for optimism in the modern age.

Highlighting a wide range of improvements—in areas such as economic wellbeing, life expectancy, health, freedom, peace, safety, leisure, and more—Pinker paints pellingly rosy portrait of our current state. “Progress is not a matter of faith or optimism,but is a fact of human history,indeed the greatest fact in human history,” he says.

Again, despite all this, the cultural pessimism persists, based on a simple and debased prejudice. “If you believe that humans can improve their lot, I have been told,that means that you have a blind faithand a quasi-religious belief in the outmoded superstitionand the false promise of the myth of the onward marchof inexorable progress,” Pinker explains. “You are a cheerleader for vulgar American can-doism, with the rah-rah spirit of boardroom ideology,Silicon Valley and the Chamber of Commerce.You are a practitioner of Whig history,a naive optimist, a Pollyanna and, of course, a Pangloss.”

As for the solution to such attitudes, Pinker points to the “norms and institutions” of the Enlightenment as the source of our progress and the strongest antidote for our present pessimism:

Progress is not some mystical force or dialectic lifting us ever higher.It’s not a mysterious arc of history bending toward justice.It’s the result of human efforts governed by an idea,an idea that we associate with the 18th century Enlightenment,namely that if we apply reason and sciencethat enhance human well-being,we can gradually succeed.Is progress inevitable? Of course not.Progress does not mean that everything es betterfor everyone everywhere all the time.That would be a miracle, and progress is not a miraclebut problem-solving.Problems are inevitableand solutions create new problems which have to be solved in their turn.

Pinker is right to align our focus toward human reason and human effort. Yet, as folks such as Samuel Greggand Ben Domenech have recently argued, we should also be careful in our generalizations of the Enlightenment and its multiple manifestations.For example, as Christians, we can openly acknowledge the dangers of its excessive secular humanism even as we appreciate the various strides in religious toleration and economic freedom. Likewise, in absorbing Pinker’s reflections, we should note that his Enlightenment-inspired philosophy of life has some to glean, and some to leave.

Pinker summarizes his view as follows:

We are born into a pitiless universe,facing steep odds against life-enabling orderand in constant jeopardy of falling apart.We were shaped by a process that is petitive.We are made from crooked timber, vulnerable to illusions, self-centerednessand at times astounding stupidity.

Yet human nature has also been blessed with resourcesthat open a space for a kind of redemption.We are endowed with the power bine ideas recursively,to have thoughts about our thoughts.We have an instinct for language,allowing us to share the fruits of our ingenuity and experience. We are deepened with the capacity for sympathy,for pity, miseration.These endowments have found ways to magnify their own power.The scope of language has been augmentedby the written, printed and electronic word.Our circle of sympathy has been expandedby history, journalism and the narrative arts.And our puny rational faculties have been multipliedby the norms and institutions of reason,intellectual curiosity, open debate,skepticism of authority and dogmaand the burden of proof to verify ideasby confronting them against reality.

What’s missing, of course, in Pinker’s glorification of human reason is any acknowledgement of the source and constraints of its “power,” never mind a corresponding design for our “instincts” and “capacity” for the creative passionate.Pinker is right that we are fretting, in part, because we have lost faith in man and his faculties. Yet, quite ironically, much of that pessimism stems from an overindulgencein human reason, detached from the hand and heart of a creator God.

Alas, our economic and technological successeshave routinely been paired with a humanistic, materialistic ethos, leading us to zero-sum perceptions of human relationship and bleak visions of the future. The temptation to overly relish in our own designs is real, and the failures it’s bound to bring—moral, material, and otherwise—have only served to further distort the prospects of personhood. When trouble strikes, rather than seeing the big picture of God’s abundance—viewing humans ascreators and co-creators made in the image of God—we see mass destruction, consumption and pollution.

Again, Pinker’s pro-Enlightenment vision has plenty to offer in reminding us of the power of our reason and social natures while promoting a range of norms and institutions. But this can’t be all that we absorb and embrace.

When we (also) grasp the true source and the purpose of all that, hope and optimism will move far to the front.When the fear of God is the fire that drives our philosophy of life, thefear of man will bereplaced quitehandily.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
What you may not know about members of Congress
[Note: This is the first in an occasional series, Remedial Civics, which provides information on what you should have learned in school—but probably didn’t—about how the U.S. government works (or doesn’t).] The Congress of the United States is a bicameral legislature, which means that it is made up of two chambers, or houses: the Senate and the House of Representatives. Here are some of the basic facts you should know about who they are and how they are elected. Congress...
Should commerce be tolerated?
Should we merce? Should people be allowed to conduct business, buy and sell, make a profit, and even make their livings doing so? The question appears in, of all places, the monumental Theological Commonplaces of the Lutheran scholastic theologian, Johann Gerhard (1582–1637). Gerhard specifically asks merce ought to be tolerated “in a Christian state”—that is, in a state such as the officially Lutheran one in which Gerhard lived and taught in the early seventeenth century. Gerhard raises the question because...
Should the Boston Marathon bomber get to vote?
During a CNN town hall on Monday, a student asked Democratic presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Kamala Harris whether they would allow felons in prison to vote: You have said that you believe that people with felony records should be allowed to vote while in prison. Does this mean that you would support enfranchising people like the Boston Marathon bomber, a convicted terrorist and murderer? Do you think that those convicted of sexual assault should have the opportunity to vote...
How the Fed worked after the Great Recession
Note: This is post #120 in a weekly video series on basic economics. Last week we looked at how the U.S. Federal Reserve controlled the supply of money prior to the Great Recession. In response to the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed began to employ some new instruments and approaches to getting the economy back on track. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, economist Tyler Cowen looks at three of these new methods: quantitative easing, paying interest on reserves,...
What if Jesus returns while you’re loafing at work?
As the rest of the world celebrated Easter this weekend, Eastern Orthodox Christians held Palm Sunday services. In the Eastern Christian tradition, the first three evenings of Holy Week we celebrate a service that calls us to deeper spiritual attentiveness. Bridegroom Matins, which is based on Jesus’ Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins (St. Matthew 25:1-13), drives home the message of watchfulness by repeating the hymn: Behold the eth at midnight And blessed is the servant whom He shall...
Remedial civics for the rest of us
[Note: This is the introduction to an occasional series that provides information on what you should have learned in school—but probably didn’t—about how the U.S. government works (or why it doesn’t).] For most of my adult life I thought I knew how laws were made. Since the age of seven I had been reciting the lyrics to the 1976 Schoolhouse Rock! segment, “I’m Just a Bill,” and I had learned in civics class the es-law spiel so well I was...
Malaysian High Court upholds ban on Mustafa Akyol’s ‘Islam without Extremes’
The Malaysian High Court has upheld the previous Malaysian government’s ban on three books including Mustafa Akyol’s ‘Islam without Extremes: A Muslim Case for Liberty’. Akyol is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute’s Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity, where he focuses on public policy, Islam, and modernity. He makes a powerful case for reformist trends in Islam which reinterpret religious law by referring to the moral teachings at its core. His mitment to political, economic, and religious liberty...
When was the original Good Friday?
Today is Good Friday*, the religious holiday memorates the crucifixion of Jesus Christ and his death at Calvary. Christians have celebrated the event for over two millennia. But what was the date of the original Good Friday?Almost all scholars agree that Jesus was crucified in the spring of either A.D. 30 or A.D. 33. In their book,The Final Days of Jesus: The Most Important Week of the Most Important Person Who Ever Lived, Andreas Köstenberger and Justin Taylor contend that...
How Jesus Christ upended the scapegoat myth: a Girardian interpretation
All societies, writes the French philosopher Rene Girard, are rooted in violence. Such violence has a mimetic dimension, which means that men are fated to mimic the behavior of other men. They like what others like, they desire what others desire. Inevitably, the dynamics of reciprocal imitation lead to disputes and social chaos. However, the human being rejects chaos and cries for the restoration of order; but without being able to get rid of the mimetic desire, one single solution...
Rev. Sirico: Easter in the wake of the Notre Dame fire
It was a terrible thing on Monday to watch as flames consumed the beautiful and historic Notre Dame du Paris cathedral; I’m certain that I was not alone in fearing that before the conflagration was over, we would see that sublime e crashing down in a heap of ash and shattered stone. Thank God that was not the case, and that the courageous Paris fire brigade was able to bring the inferno under control before what would have been the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved