When I questioned the seriousness of the statement and pointed out relative life expectancy and infant mortality the response was:For all technological advancements we have made, humanity is not any better off now than it was 5000 years ago. There is still some type of class system in place, with those in the lower classes being kept there by the ruling class.
I am debating whether to pull hard numbers and citations for relative proportion of the population living where slavery is legal, relative existence and size of a middle class in 3000 BC, proportion of children receiving any education beyond directly needed skills at all, etc. But all the historical wrongness aside, the attitude just floors me. How is technological advance in any way trivial to human well-being in any case? Is it worth even pursuing an argument that seems to assume that?Yes, I do believe it. I group life expectancy in with technological advancement. Strip away all the trappings and we still have a ruling class, a middle class and a lower class. Strip away all the trappings and parents are trying to get the best available education for their children. There is still slavery, children being exploited and someone or some group trying to rule the world. When you take it down to the very basic of levels, nothing much has changed.
Has anyone ever run across this belief before? What would you say in response? Should I be scared that noone else on that forum seems even phased by the statement?