skip to main |
skip to sidebar
The paradox of material and technological progress is that we seem to become more risk-averse the safer it makes us. The more comfortable we become, the less eager we are to take the risks that are the only route to future progress. The irony is that one reason Japan has survived this catastrophic event as well as it has is its great material development and wealth.
Modern civilization is in the daily business of measuring and mitigating risk, but its advance requires that we continue to take risk. It would compound Japan's tragedy if the lesson America learns is that we should pursue the illusory and counterproductive goal of eliminating all risk.
- Editors, "Nuclear Overreactions", Wall Street Journal, March 14, 2011.
0 Response to "The Paradox of Modernity's Comfort and Simultaneous Risk-Aversion"
Post a Comment