Post
by LaMont Cranston » Sun Jun 27, 2010 5:38 pm
FBM, If the yardstick you're using is that the study of history should enable us to eventually make perfect decisions, then history is going to fall short, but so is just about any other subject.
For most of us, when we look at the world, we see a mixture of positives and negatives. We can appreciate the beauty of Nature, all the while knowing that horrendous destruction of the environment is going on, including the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Some of us look for the positives in life, if for no other reason than it feels better to be an optimist instead of a pessimist. Feeling positive requires an expenditure of energy, but so does feeling miserable, and feeling positive pays better dividends.
In the case of history, I can see that there are at least 4 trends that have been happening on a global scale, and, mind you, these are all works in progress. The trends I see happening are as follows:
1-Since 1776, there has been a global movement toward more democratically-based forms of government. I do get it that all of these democracies (actually, they are all mixes of democratic ideals and socialism) have as much corruption, oppression and hypocrisy going on in them as they do, but that seems to be a function of any governing system. At the very minimum, they are based on principles that include the idea that it is possible for individuals to be free human beings.
2-On a world-wide basis, there is ever-more involvement of women and minorities in the social, cultural, political and economic destinies of their countries.
3-There is an ever-increasing access to information that is available to virtually everybody on the planet. Even though there are repressive governments in places like North Korea, China and the Middle East who have the goal of suppressing information, in the long run, they are doomed to fail.
4-The world continues to move in the direction of a global economy.
Regardless of how you or anybody else feels about these trends, it appears to me that history is taking us in these directions.
If you are looking for evidence of the value of history, how do you feel about Martin Luther King and Gandhi? From what I can tell, MLK looked at Gandhi and other historical examples, and Gandhi looked at history to see what would work to achieve freedom for his country. Is the world a better place because they did what they did? I'd say so.