Friday, February 01, 2008

Progress and innovation

I was wondering what to write about next and then came upon this question: "Is progress and invention natural or cultural phenomena?"

Well, in many ways it is a cultural phenomenon. Most of the progress and innovation in the last 500 years has occurred in Western culture. Jarad Diamond speculated in his book "Guns, Germs and Steel" why this is so, because of the openness and flexibility of the West, especially during pre-Columbus Europe. Europe, the cradle of Western civilization, has been the fermentation of this cultural phenomenon. The culture of democracy and capitalism, which the West instigated, has also been a hot bed for progress and innovation, which is today's chief hot bed for progress and innovation.

In comparison, other cultures have been 'closed' and not receptive to the new ideas that have sparked progress and innovation. Take a look at the Islamic world in recent years where not even a handful of new books have been published. Furthermore, what sustains the Arab and Islamic world economically is the progress and innovation that was mostly formulated in the West. Now, Communism as a culture was innovative but it didn't progress because it lacked the open society that is essential to achieve progress and sustain technological innovations.

What make progress and innovation 'natural' is that sooner or later it is going to happen. And generally it has been the West that has been receptive to this natural process. The West has embraced this natural process more readily and enthusiastically than any other culture. This is why the rest of the world is more and more resembling Western culture, because it has the progress and innovations to best sustain and maintain all civilization.

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