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There is also the third issue, that the metrics have incomplete coverage and are chosen for effect Which is not to say they're wrong, mind, but statistics are mostly presentation - what isn't shown can be just as significant, or sometimes far more significant, than what is.
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Two things that can both be true: 1. The world is getting better, by most metrics of human well-being 2. The risk of a major catastrophe is going up over time Yet I often see ppl try to dismiss 2 by saying "The doomsayers are wrong, things are getting better, [argument for 1]"
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E.g. it's well and good to mention that more countries are adopting democratic institutions, but measuring the health and integrity of those institutions does not produce such a rosy picture.
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Whichever way you swing it, though, our metrics and analysis are fairly pathetic approximations of a world that is much more fluid than we pretend. Democracy could see a massive improvement within a decade. It could also die. Likewise for *most* other issues, but far from all.
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There are trends you can forecast, and trends you can't. The problem is, we often can't tell which are which until after the fact - when we can pretend that we knew all along.
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