Edward, you need to clear your inbox.
So there can never be any good new ideas? Really? Is that right for any given point in history or is there a specific pinnacle of civilisation you could point out? Because otherwise, I'm going to have to assume that we had it best right before that first caveman tamed fire.
I think the problem isn't so much that people have new ideas, but that they insist on preferring the really idiotic ones to the good ones. Like Lizzie said at some point, we were heading in the right direction once but we've managed to make some idiotic choices in the past 50 years. Along, admittedly, with some good ones, but still.
To be honest, I don't think the Dauphins had it nearly as good as today's children... They were kept on a pretty short leash, actually.
Popular media eases the flow of information, and an eased flow of information is key to the breaking down of a society as it is flooded with a mass influx of new ideas.
So there can never be any good new ideas? Really? Is that right for any given point in history or is there a specific pinnacle of civilisation you could point out? Because otherwise, I'm going to have to assume that we had it best right before that first caveman tamed fire.
I think the problem isn't so much that people have new ideas, but that they insist on preferring the really idiotic ones to the good ones. Like Lizzie said at some point, we were heading in the right direction once but we've managed to make some idiotic choices in the past 50 years. Along, admittedly, with some good ones, but still.
Interesting article in the New Yorker about why American kids are so spoiled.
"With the exception of the imperial offspring of the Ming dynasty and the dauphins of pre-Revolutionary France, contemporary American kids may represent the most indulged young people in the history of the world. It’s not just that they’ve been given unprecedented amounts of stuff—clothes, toys, cameras, skis, computers, televisions, cell phones, PlayStations, iPods. (The market for Burberry Baby and other forms of kiddie “couture” has reportedly been growing by ten per cent a year.) They’ve also been granted unprecedented authority. “Parents want their kids’ approval, a reversal of the past ideal of children striving for their parents’ approval,” Jean Twenge and W. Keith Campbell, both professors of psychology, have written. In many middle-class families, children have one, two, sometimes three adults at their beck and call. This is a social experiment on a grand scale, and a growing number of adults fear that it isn’t working out so well: according to one poll, commissioned by Time and CNN, two-thirds of American parents think that their children are spoiled."
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2012/07/02/120702crbo_books_kolbert?currentPage=all
To be honest, I don't think the Dauphins had it nearly as good as today's children... They were kept on a pretty short leash, actually.