Mark P. Mills: Get Ready for the Roaring 2020s!
Pessimism is everywhere, but the author of The Cloud Revolution says we're entering a golden age of abundant, ubiquitous, and liberating technology.
Pessimism is everywhere, but the author of The Cloud Revolution says we're entering a golden age of abundant, ubiquitous, and liberating technology.
A review of the new book Tickets For The Ark, by Rebecca Nesbit
The Superabundance authors make a compelling case that the world is getting richer for everyone.
Superabundance explains why a world of 8 billion people is infinitely richer than one with 1 billion.
Richard V. Reeves documents terrible trends and suggests solutions that don't come at the expense of women.
The EconTalk host and Wild Problems author talks about the limits of cost-benefit analyses.
The host of EconTalk and author of Wild Problems says our biggest decisions don't submit to easy cost-benefit analyses.
The best-selling author of Why People Believe Weird Things sees a fundamental clash between wokeness and scientific inquiry.
And yet infinitely recyclable plastics are on the horizon.
The Founders Fund vice president and Pirate Wires author on supporting heretics as a means of social and economic innovation.
Princess Leia shows us why hope is crucial for a liberty-oriented way of life.
The Harvard linguist says Enlightenment reasoning is central to both material and moral progress.
"What has gotten materially better in America in, say, the last twenty years?" So! Much!
Americans have a reputation for being cockeyed optimists, but we're suckers when it comes to "declension narratives" about the fallen state of our world.
Ten Global Trends Every Smart Person Should Know documents progress and explains why it happens.
Ten Global Trends Every Smart Person Should Know documents the immense, ongoing progress that politicians and media refuse to acknowledge.
Sometimes, it's good to take a step back
Those smitten by John Wayne, Robert E. Lee, or even Joseph Stalin should commission statues on their own property. The rest of us have more important issues to debate.
We should celebrate our fandom on our own dime, and on our own property.
Jason Feifer's podcast explores "why we resist new things" and tells great stories about panics over the novel, the elevator, the waltz, margarine, and more.
Thanks to the ultimate resource: the human mind
Mark the 49th anniversary of Earth Day by celebrating human ingenuity.
Political theorist Jacob Levy reminds us that the arc of history doesn't always bend towards justice. Moral retrogression has happened before, and could well occur again.
If Times editors don't want to learn about their genetics, then they simply shouldn't take the tests.
New Simon Abundance Index elegantly refutes primitive zero-sum intuitions with respect to population and resource availability trends.
A brief look at 50-year cost and quality trends in cars, houses, college and health care.
One of America's top social scientists on what has changed since he sat down with Reason 38 years ago.
Economist Mark J. Perry talks about rising incomes, flattening inequality, low unemployment, and why none of it seems to make us feel better.
Satellite data finds that gains temperate and boreal forests offset reductions in tropical forests.
The Harvard psychologist splits the difference between Dr. Pangloss and Pope Francis.
Pope Francis is part of the problem, nuclear energy is part of the solution, and libertarians need to admit that not every regulation will turn us into Venezuela.
Mary Shelley's misunderstood masterpiece turns 200.
New report claims U.S. overpopulation will blight their futures.
Triumphal stories and a commitment to fight on for individual freedom worldwide.
As Trump learned this week, pandering to white nationalists means alienating most other Americans.
Satellite survey finds hidden forests all over the world.
Especially if it turns out to be valuable?
Taxing automation would slow down progress and ultimately make most of us poorer than we would otherwise be.
Cato's Johan Norberg on politics, progress, and why he remains optimistic.