Progress and the Invisible Hand

Progress and the Invisible Hand

by RichardBronk (Author)

Synopsis

What is 'progress'? In Richard Bronk's brilliant analytical study of this concept, he separates the material progress of a nation from the more problematic progress in human happiness and welfare. He wonders how a feel-bad factor can exist in a country with a steadily increasing GDP. Bronk then looks at other times and mind-sets (the Ancient World, the Early Christian, the Renaissance and the Enlightenment) to discover why their particular economic progress eventually failed, or (in the case of the Enlightenment) was ultimately successful. Among the conditions which he believes must be met before a belief in, and drive towards progress can result include: experience of positive change in one lifetime; knowledge of, but a critical relationship with, the past and faith in the power of human reason and skills to engineer and control change. PROGRESS AND THE INVISIBLE HAND questions many of the basic assumptions behind our headlong pursuit of progress, and will provoke and disquiet in equal measure.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Time Warner Paperbacks
Published: 01 Jul 1999

ISBN 10: 0751526606
ISBN 13: 9780751526608

Media Reviews
'wide-ranging and thought-provoking...of absorbing interest not only to economists and philosophers but also to the man and woman in the street who is worried about the direction in which society is moving' John Gray, author of FALSE DAWN 'It is a good, wise book. It needs to be widely read.' CONTEMPORARY REVIEWS 'Persusasively argued and thought-provoking.' EURO BUSINESS 'Bronk's solutions of interventionalism, and of the re-insertion of moral and social values into the economic debate, provide a telling tract for our times.' OXFORD TODAY
Author Bio
Born in New York in 1960, Richard Bronk was educated at St Peter's School, York, and at Merton College, Oxford. After leaving Oxford, he was trained as a financial analyst at the Bank of England and worked at N M Rothschild & Sons and ING-Baring, which he left at the end of 1995 to write this book.