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progression
progress
progress The idea of progress, conceived as the increasing sophistication of knowledge and the improving quality of life, has been the driving force of Western civilization for at least three hundred years. During the twentieth century, the same idea has been adopted, with variations, by virtually every culture on earth. In the
Third World, development and
modernization are taken to be synonymous with progress.
The history of the idea of progress is complex, and even the meaning of the word is fundamentally disputed. Contemporary scholars disagree over whether the philosophers of classical antiquity had any expectation of progress in its modern sense. Robert Nisbet in
The History of Progress (1980) finds some evidence that they did. But cyclical theories of civilization's rise and decline were far more common in the ancient world, and continued to be supported into the modern age by such distinguished scholars as Montesquieu, Helvetius, Gibbon, and Spengler. Another tradition of thought about human history is entirely pessimistic, seeing nothing but decline from an earlier golden age.
The idea of a universal history of human progress was developed during the eighteenth century, in the works of Voltaire, Turgot, Herder, and Kant, among others. With
Kant we arrive at the fully developed idea of a unified human race moving towards the ideal of a ‘universal
civil society’ founded on
justice and based on the maximum individual freedom for all.
It is no exaggeration to say that philosophers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries became obsessed with the idea of progress. As hopes of a spiritual heaven faded, people's thoughts turned to the dream of heaven on earth, achieved through progress. The eighteenth century idea had five elements: the continuing Deistic belief in Benevolent Providence, an essential optimism about the meaning of human life and destiny; the belief that history was not a chaos, but moved through predictable stages according to knowable laws; the belief in posterity, fulfilling the promise of progress and honouring the forerunners who had made it possible; the centrality of knowledge as the driving force of progress; the belief in the ultimate perfectibility of humankind. There was a powerful element of religious nostalgia in all this, and many historians have argued that the whole progressive ideology down to the present day is a mirror-image of Christianity, with the secular
utopia substituting for the promise of paradise (see, for example, C. L. Becker ,
The Heavenly City of the Eighteenth-Century Philosophers, 1932
).
While the French Revolution dealt a severe set-back to this optimistic eighteenth-century philosophy, two of the most secular elements were carried forward into the nineteenth century, with earth-shaking results: the centrality of knowledge and the search for laws of history.
Saint-Simon, and more especially
Comte, combined these two elements with Kant's vision of a universal human history to produce an enormously influential theory of progress. Comte proposed that humanity evolved as the human mind evolved, and that human history could be divided into three distinct stages based on the level of human understanding. The Theological Stage was characterized by primitive, animist religious beliefs. The Metaphysical Stage (just ending, Comte believed, in his own time) produced more sophisticated and abstract religions. The emerging Positive Stage would be an era completely defined by science and rationality, which would produce an earthly utopia. Although criticized then and later, Comte's grand theory entered into Western consciousness. Its rational, scientific utopia was the very model of modernity.
Karl
Marx came to his theory of progress by way of a different philosophical tradition, but there seems little doubt that Comte and Saint-Simon were influences.
Hegel's highly abstract theory of history envisaged the progress of the human spirit towards perfect apprehension of itself and the world. Marx grounded this vision in reality by relating progress to economic struggles. His theory of
historical materialism predicts that the final utopian state (communism) will be brought about through the inexorable workings of economic laws.
Spencer's theory of Social
Darwinism is another example of the nineteenthcentury fascination with progress. Social Darwinism was more fashionable in the United States than in Europe. It linked progress to the growth and increasing complexity of societies, and especially to the natural mechanism of the survival of the fittest, which Spencer believed would create the best possible society, if allowed to do so.
For most of the twentieth century, theories of progress followed the pattern of the nineteenth—optimistic, rationalistic, and increasingly materialistic. Sociology contributed its share in the form of early functional and
post-industrial theories which predicated a future society of harmony and prosperity based on science. At the century's end, however, the idea of progress seems to be in eclipse. The great utopian ideologies have self-destructed at enormous cost. Science has not produced a moral utopia for most of humanity, and the future is clouded by environmental doubts. See also
ENVIRONMENT;
POST-MODERNISM.
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HIV Progression Markers Vary with Age.(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)
Newspaper article from: AIDS Weekly; 3/6/2000; 700+ words
; ...The most important determinants of HIV progression in infants and young children appear...associated with infant HIV-1 disease progression. In a recent study, clinical, virologic...determine the predictors of disease progression by 18 months of age and the associations...
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New disease progression therapy research from Duke University, Department of Surgery discussed.
Newspaper article from: Cancer Weekly; 11/17/2009; 700+ words
; ...Validation of a nomogram to predict disease progression following salvage radiotherapy after...Stephenson nomogram') to predict disease progression after salvage radiotherapy (SRT) among...of whom 30 (29%) developed disease progression after SRT during a median follow-up...
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House Holds Onto Edge Against Progression Betting
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 12/30/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...loss.) With that progression, after six consecutive...bet. The logic of progressions moved Dahl to subtitle...in 21, and to tout progression as the way to beat...In the long run, a progression player, with some...The bottom line: Progressions can be fun, but don...
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Taking the guesswork out of glaucoma progression
Magazine article from: Ophthalmology Times; 10/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...defect The diagnosis of glaucomatous progression is a daunting task for the ophthalmologist...provide significant insight into glaucoma progression, and allow practitioners to determine...Comparing these printouts and identifying progression has always been an inexact art that...
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Predictors of disease progression in HIV infection: a review.(Review)
Magazine article from: AIDS Research and Therapy; 5/14/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...1, 2, 3]. Highly variable disease progression rates between individuals are well-recognised, with progression categorised as rapid, typical or intermediate and late or long-term non-progression [1, 4]. The majority of infected...
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Glaucoma trials provide information on field progression
Magazine article from: Ophthalmology Times; 4/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...large-scale trials demonstrate early progression can be detected by perimetry Reviewed...regarding interpretation of visual field progression, said Anders H. Heijl, MD, PhD...predefined criteria for visual field progression," Dr. Heijl said. "The experience...
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Age at onset predicts risk of rapid myopic progression
Magazine article from: Ophthalmology Times; 3/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...associated with an increased risk for rapid progression of refractive error, said Karla Zadnik...characteristics that predict rapid myopia progression in school-aged children, Dr. Zadnik...near work at myopia onset. With rapid progression defined as an average change of at least...
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Spatial frequency doubling excellent tool to predict progression in glaucoma
Magazine article from: Ophthalmology Times; 11/15/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...have an excellent ability to predict progression of visual field loss and optic disc...subjects also were identified as having progression or nonprogression at the end of the...whether the patient had glaucoma or progression, Dr. Maddess said. "This is a bit...
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Mechanisms of HIV non-progression; robust and sustained CD4+ T-cell proliferative responses to p24 antigen correlate with control of viraemia and lack of disease progression after long-term transfusion-acquired HIV-1 infection.(Research)(Report)
Magazine article from: Retrovirology; 12/11/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...observed increase in the rate of disease progression in TAHIV may be due to the higher inoculation...for an increased rate of HIV disease progression [5, 6]. The bias toward an aged...previously observed a high frequency of non-progression in this TAHIV cohort after 20 years...
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Chord progressions
Magazine article from: Canadian Musician; 9/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...at or hear a chord progression and understand how...often, certain chord progressions crop up repeatedly...recognize certain progressions, having played them...utilize similar chord progressions. Things Are Progressing Nicely The term 'progression' is apt, because...
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progression
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
progression in mathematics, sequence of quantities...consecutive terms is the same. An arithmetic progression is a sequence in which each term is...or general, term; e.g., the progression 3, 7, 11, 15, &hellip...
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harmonic progression
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
harmonic progression see progression .
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geometric progression
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
ge·o·met·ric pro·gres·sion • n. a progression of numbers with a constant ratio between each number and the one before (e.g., each subsequent number is increased by a factor of 3 in the progression 1, 3, 9, 27, 81 ).
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arithmetic progression
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
arithmetic progression Sequence of numbers in which each term is produced by adding a constant...example is the sequence 1, 3, 5, …. The sum of such a progression, a + ( a + d ) + ( a + 2 d ) + … is an arithmetic series...
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correlated progression
Book article from: A Dictionary of Zoology
correlated progression The hypothesis that evolutionary change of characters occurs by correlated response . A change in one character may influence change in another, such that the rate of change of the two characters is not independent. Compare MOSAIC EVOLUTION .
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