Today, we are bombarded with calls for change, as if all change
was an improvement over the status quo. Dr. Gastil challenges this
view in a thorough examination of concepts of change and progress.
He asserts that our cultural world is divided between those who
believe in one version of the 19th-century vision of progress, and
those who see progress as a failed concept--either because they
view change as regressive or believe that all values are
relative.
Gastil insists that we need to overcome this cleavage by
developing an analysis that incorporates the widest variety of
positions on the subject. Until we do, it will be impossible to
make any sense of policy debate. To reconstruct the debate, the
author believes the first requirement is one or more proper
definitions of progress so that we can better understand which
meaning is being addressed. Then we need to construct a broad,
humanistic basis or framework that incorporates values identified
with utility, justice, achievement, and reverence. After proposing
definitions and a framework for analysis, Gastil considers cultural
change across a wide variety of fields, including art and
literature, violence, political organizations, and the significance
of human life. In doing so, he provides a stimulating volume of
value to all concerned with economic, social, cultural, and
political development or change.
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